Literaturdatenbank |
![]() |
![]() |
Široký, P., Petrželková, K., Kamler, M., Mihalca, A. D., & Modrý, D. (2006). Hyalomma aegyptium as dominant tick in tortoises of the genus testudo in balkan countries, with notes on its host preferences. Experimental and Applied Acarology, 40(3-4), 276–290.
Added by: Admin (14 Aug 2008 20:32:49 UTC) |
Resource type: Journal Article BibTeX citation key: Sirok2006 View all bibliographic details ![]() |
Categories: General Keywords: Habitat = habitat, Parasiten = parasites, Schildkröten = turtles + tortoises, Südosteuropa = South-Eastern Europe, Testudinidae, Testudo, Testudo graeca, Testudo hermanni, Testudo marginata, Veterinärmedizin = veterinary medicine Creators: Kamler, Mihalca, Modrý, Petrželková, Široký Collection: Experimental and Applied Acarology |
Views: 1/655
Views index: 9% Popularity index: 2.25% |
Abstract |
Testudinidae Collection of 1327 ticks sampled throughout Greece, Bulgaria, Romania and Croatia, from 211 tortoises belonging to three species, Testudo marginata Schoepff, T. graeca Linnaeus, and T. hermanni Gmelin, revealed the presence of four species of ixodid ticks, namely Hyalomma aegyptium (Linnaeus), Haemaphysalis sulcata Canestrini and Fanzago, H. inermis Birula and Rhipicephalus sanguineus (Latreille). Study confirmed the strong dominance of all life stages of H. aegyptium among ticks parasitizing west Palaearctic tortoises of genus Testudo Linnaeus. Furthermore, a considerable portion of ticks collected from tortoises in southwestern Bulgaria represent larvae and nymphs of H. sulcata. At the same area we collected as exception one larva and one nymph of H. inermis from a single specimen of T. hermanni. Our findings of four adults of R. sanguineus is the first record of this species from reptilian host. According to our results achieved on localities with syntopic occurrence of two tortoise species, T. marginata and T. graeca represent in the Balkans the principal hosts of H. aegyptium, whereas T. hermanni serves only as an alternative host in the areas close to range of either T. marginata or T. graeca.
Added by: Admin |