PETRŽELKOVÁ, Klara J., Carine UWAMAHORO, Barbora PAFČO, Barbora ČERVENÁ, Peter SAMAŠ, Antoine MUDAKIKWA, Richard MUVUNYI, Prosper UWINGELI, Kirsten GILARDI, Julius NZIZA, Jean Bosco NOHERI, Winnie ECKARDT, Felix NDAGIJIMANA, Benard SSEBIDE, Ricky OKWIROKELLO, Fred NIZEYIMANA, Eddy Kambale SYALUHA, Gaspard NZAYISENGA, Luis Flores GIRÓN, Méthode BAHIZI, Adrien Emile NTWARI, Jean-Paul LUKUSA, Jean Claude TUMUSHIME, Damien MANGURA, Jeff MAPILANGA, Arthur KALONJI, Robert ARUHO, Anna STRYKOVÁ, Zuzana TEHLAROVÁ, Rita CAMEIRA, Linda LOWENSTINE, Jan ŠLAPETA, Dušan ROMPORTL, Nicola FERRARI, Michael CRANFIELD a David MODRÝ. Heterogeneity in patterns of helminth infections across populations of mountain gorillas (Gorilla beringei beringei). Nature Scientific Reports. London: NATURE RESEARCH, 2021, roč. 11, č. 1, s. "10869", 14 s. ISSN 2045-2322. Dostupné z: https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-89283-4. |
Další formáty:
BibTeX
LaTeX
RIS
@article{1813017, author = {Petrželková, Klara J. and Uwamahoro, Carine and Pafčo, Barbora and Červená, Barbora and Samaš, Peter and Mudakikwa, Antoine and Muvunyi, Richard and Uwingeli, Prosper and Gilardi, Kirsten and Nziza, Julius and Noheri, Jean Bosco and Eckardt, Winnie and Ndagijimana, Felix and Ssebide, Benard and Okwirokello, Ricky and Nizeyimana, Fred and Syaluha, Eddy Kambale and Nzayisenga, Gaspard and Girón, Luis Flores and Bahizi, Méthode and Ntwari, Adrien Emile and Lukusa, JeanandPaul and Tumushime, Jean Claude and Mangura, Damien and Mapilanga, Jeff and Kalonji, Arthur and Aruho, Robert and Stryková, Anna and Tehlarová, Zuzana and Cameira, Rita and Lowenstine, Linda and Šlapeta, Jan and Romportl, Dušan and Ferrari, Nicola and Cranfield, Michael and Modrý, David}, article_location = {London}, article_number = {1}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-89283-4}, keywords = {ANOPLOCEPHALA-PERFOLIATA; GASTROINTESTINAL PARASITES; TRICHOSTRONGYLID LARVAE; COPROLOGICAL METHODS; GROUP-SIZE; DYNAMICS; PRIMATE; ECOLOGY; FOREST; AGE}, language = {eng}, issn = {2045-2322}, journal = {Nature Scientific Reports}, title = {Heterogeneity in patterns of helminth infections across populations of mountain gorillas (Gorilla beringei beringei)}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-89283-4}, volume = {11}, year = {2021} }
TY - JOUR ID - 1813017 AU - Petrželková, Klara J. - Uwamahoro, Carine - Pafčo, Barbora - Červená, Barbora - Samaš, Peter - Mudakikwa, Antoine - Muvunyi, Richard - Uwingeli, Prosper - Gilardi, Kirsten - Nziza, Julius - Noheri, Jean Bosco - Eckardt, Winnie - Ndagijimana, Felix - Ssebide, Benard - Okwirokello, Ricky - Nizeyimana, Fred - Syaluha, Eddy Kambale - Nzayisenga, Gaspard - Girón, Luis Flores - Bahizi, Méthode - Ntwari, Adrien Emile - Lukusa, Jean-Paul - Tumushime, Jean Claude - Mangura, Damien - Mapilanga, Jeff - Kalonji, Arthur - Aruho, Robert - Stryková, Anna - Tehlarová, Zuzana - Cameira, Rita - Lowenstine, Linda - Šlapeta, Jan - Romportl, Dušan - Ferrari, Nicola - Cranfield, Michael - Modrý, David PY - 2021 TI - Heterogeneity in patterns of helminth infections across populations of mountain gorillas (Gorilla beringei beringei) JF - Nature Scientific Reports VL - 11 IS - 1 SP - "10869" EP - "10869" PB - NATURE RESEARCH SN - 20452322 KW - ANOPLOCEPHALA-PERFOLIATA KW - GASTROINTESTINAL PARASITES KW - TRICHOSTRONGYLID LARVAE KW - COPROLOGICAL METHODS KW - GROUP-SIZE KW - DYNAMICS KW - PRIMATE KW - ECOLOGY KW - FOREST KW - AGE UR - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-89283-4 N2 - Conservation efforts have led to the recovery of the endangered mountain gorilla populations. Due to their limited potential for spatial expansion, population densities increased, which may alter the epidemiology of infectious diseases. Recently, clinical gastrointestinal illnesses linked to helminth infections have been recorded in both gorilla populations. To understand drivers and patterns of helminth infections we quantified strongylid and tapeworm infections across both Virunga Massif and Bwindi populations using fecal egg counts. We assessed the impact of age, sex, group size, season and spatial differences used as a proxy, which reflects observed variation in the occurrence of gastrointestinal problems, vegetation types, gorilla subpopulation growth and associated social structure on helminth infections. We revealed striking geographic differences in strongylid infections with higher egg counts mostly in areas with high occurrences of gastrointestinal disease. Increased helminth egg counts were also associated with decreasing group size in some areas. Observed spatial differences may reflect mutual effects of variations in subpopulation growth rates, gorilla social structure, and vegetation associated with altitude across mountain gorilla habitat. Helminth infection intensities in Virunga gorillas were lowest in the youngest and the oldest animals. Elucidating parasite infection patterns of endangered species with low genetic diversity is crucial for their conservation management. ER -
PETRŽELKOVÁ, Klara J., Carine UWAMAHORO, Barbora PAFČO, Barbora ČERVENÁ, Peter SAMAŠ, Antoine MUDAKIKWA, Richard MUVUNYI, Prosper UWINGELI, Kirsten GILARDI, Julius NZIZA, Jean Bosco NOHERI, Winnie ECKARDT, Felix NDAGIJIMANA, Benard SSEBIDE, Ricky OKWIROKELLO, Fred NIZEYIMANA, Eddy Kambale SYALUHA, Gaspard NZAYISENGA, Luis Flores GIRÓN, Méthode BAHIZI, Adrien Emile NTWARI, Jean-Paul LUKUSA, Jean Claude TUMUSHIME, Damien MANGURA, Jeff MAPILANGA, Arthur KALONJI, Robert ARUHO, Anna STRYKOVÁ, Zuzana TEHLAROVÁ, Rita CAMEIRA, Linda LOWENSTINE, Jan ŠLAPETA, Dušan ROMPORTL, Nicola FERRARI, Michael CRANFIELD a David MODRÝ. Heterogeneity in patterns of helminth infections across populations of mountain gorillas (Gorilla beringei beringei). \textit{Nature Scientific Reports}. London: NATURE RESEARCH, 2021, roč.~11, č.~1, s.~''10869'', 14 s. ISSN~2045-2322. Dostupné z: https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-89283-4.
|