Alveococcus multilocularis in the Arctic fox (Alopex lagopus) in the Arctic zone of Yakutia
https://doi.org/10.31016/1998-8435-2023-17-2-229-235
Abstract
The purpose of the research is to study of infection of white foxes (Alopex lagopus) with alveococcosis in the Arctic zone of Yakutia and to perform molecular genetic study of Alveococcus multilocularis.
Materials and methods. To determine the Alveococcus infection in the Arctic fox in the Arctic zone of Yakutia, 19 specimens were studied in 2018, 27 specimens in 2019, 51 specimens in 2020 and 119 specimens in 2021 by complete and partial dissections of the gastrointestinal tract, other organs and tissues. The species identification of detected helminths was performed using the Identification Guide of Helminths in Carnivorous Mammals in the USSR (D. P. Kozlov, 1977). The collected helminths were fixed in 70% alcohol. Nineteen samples were studied by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to determine A. multilocularis isolates.
Results and discussion. In the Russian Federation, A. multilocularis is widespread in Yakutia, Chukotka, Magadan Region, Krasnoyarsk, Altai, and Khabarovsk Territories, and other regions. In the Arctic zone, Arctic foxes are 100% infected with A. multilocularis. The parasite circulates among wild animals, mainly polar foxes and Arctic lemmings (Dicrostonyx torquatus Pallas, 1778). Agricultural and wild ungulates become infected by ingesting parasite eggs, and dogs become infected by eating organs and tissues affected by multilocular alveococcosis. There is a risk of transmission of A. multilocularis to humans. A person becomes infected in processing the skins of arctic foxes obtained in hunting, and through contact with infected domestic carnivores. An increase in white fox populations and in their infection rate including A. multilocularis was found in the tundra zone. In the Arctic zone of Yakutia, A. multilocularis form that was close to the North American N1 strain was found.
About the Authors
L. M. KokolovaRussian Federation
Kokolova Luidmila M., Doctor of Veterinary Sciences
23/1 Bestuzhev-Marlinsky st., Yakutsk, 677001, Russia
L. Yu. Gavrileva
Russian Federation
Gavrileva Lubov Yu., Candidate of Veterinary Sciences
23/1 Bestuzhev-Marlinsky st., Yakutsk, 677001, Russia
I. M. Okhlopkov
Russian Federation
Okhlopkov Innokentiy M., Candidate of Biological Sciences
41 Lenina Ave., Yakutsk, 677980, Russia
References
1. Bessonov A. S. Alveolar echinococcosis (Echinococcus multilocularis) and hydatosis. Moscow: Russian Agricultural Academy, 2003; 334. (In Russ.)
2. Gubanov N. M. Alveococcus infection in carnivorous mammals and mouse-like rodents in Yakutia. Sbornik dokladov nauchnoy konferentsii, posvyashchennoy 80-letiyu K. I. Skryabina = Collection of reports of the Scientific Conference dedicated to the 80th Anniversary of K. I. Skryabin. Moscow, 1960; 41-42. (In Russ.)
3. Isakov S. I., Safronov M. G. Echinococcosis and alveococcosis of animals in Yakutia. «Perspektivy likvidatsii poter' ot ekhinokokkoza v zhivotnovodstve»: tezisy dokladov nauchnoprakticheskogo seminara = "Prospects for the elimination of losses from echinococcosis in animal husbandry": abstracts of the Scientific and Practical Seminar. Moscow, 1987; 23. (In Russ.)
4. Kokolova L. M. The spread of zoonotic helminth infections in the Far North. Trudy Vserossiyskogo instituta gel'mintologii = Proceedings of the AllRussian Institute of Helminthology. M.: Russian Agricultural Academy, 2006; 41: 91–96. (In Russ.)
5. Kokolova L. M., Safronov V. M., Platonov T. A., Zakharov E. S., Verkhovtseva L. A., Gavrilieva L. Yu. Epizootological situation on zoonosis and parasitic diseases of animals and fish in Yakutia. Vestnik Severo-Vostochnogo Federal'nogo universiteta im. M. K. Ammosova = Bulletin of the M. K. Ammosov North-Eastern Federal University. 2012; 9 (3): 86–90. (In Russ.)
6. Kokolova L. M., Platonov T. A., Verkhovtseva L. A., Grigorieva L. A., Kochneva L. G. The role of parasitic diseases in people pathology. Rossiyskiy parazitologicheskiy zhurnal = Russian Journal of Parasitology. 2013; 2: 43–47. (In Russ.)
7. Morozov Yu. F. On the knowledge of helminth fauna in rodents and insectivorous animals in the USSR and the experience of its ecological and geographical analysis: autoref. dis. … Cand. Biol. Sci. Moscow, 1955; 346. (In Russ.)
8. Ovsyukova N. I. Natural focus of alveolar echinococcosis in Chukotka. Meditsinskaya parazitologiya i parazitarnyye bolezni = Medical parasitology and parasitic diseases. Moscow, 1961; 2: 226. (In Russ.)
9. Safronov M. G. On species composition of echinococcosis pathogens in the Yakut ASSR. Sbornik rabot po gel'mintologii = Collection of works on helminthology. Moscow, 1959; 1: 165-166. (In Russ.)
10. Safronov M. G. Epizootology of alveococcosis and echinococcosis in the Yakut ASSR. Veterïnarïya = Veterinary Medicine. 1963; 4: 48-49. (In Russ.)
11. Knapp J., Staebler S., Bart J. M., Stien A., Yoccoz N. G., Drögemüller C., Gottstein B., Deplazes P. Echinococcus multilocularis in Svalbard, Norway: microsatellite genotyping to investigate the origin of a highly focal contamination. Infect. Genet. Evol. 2012; 1270–1274.
12. Nakao M., Xiao N., Okamoto M., Yanagida T., Sako Y., Ito A. Geographic pattern of genetic variation in the fox tapeworm Echinococcus multilocularis. Parasitol. Int. 2009; 58 (4): 384–389.
Review
For citations:
Kokolova L.M., Gavrileva L.Yu., Okhlopkov I.M. Alveococcus multilocularis in the Arctic fox (Alopex lagopus) in the Arctic zone of Yakutia. Russian Journal of Parasitology. 2023;17(2):229-235. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.31016/1998-8435-2023-17-2-229-235