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Egyptian Journal of Zoology
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Rabie, S., Hussein, A., Schaub, G. (2014). COCCIDIAN BLOOD INFECTIONS OF LIZARDS IN EGYPT. Egyptian Journal of Zoology, 61(61), 49-70. doi: 10.12816/0005508
S. M. Rabie; A. A. Hussein; G. A. Schaub. "COCCIDIAN BLOOD INFECTIONS OF LIZARDS IN EGYPT". Egyptian Journal of Zoology, 61, 61, 2014, 49-70. doi: 10.12816/0005508
Rabie, S., Hussein, A., Schaub, G. (2014). 'COCCIDIAN BLOOD INFECTIONS OF LIZARDS IN EGYPT', Egyptian Journal of Zoology, 61(61), pp. 49-70. doi: 10.12816/0005508
Rabie, S., Hussein, A., Schaub, G. COCCIDIAN BLOOD INFECTIONS OF LIZARDS IN EGYPT. Egyptian Journal of Zoology, 2014; 61(61): 49-70. doi: 10.12816/0005508

COCCIDIAN BLOOD INFECTIONS OF LIZARDS IN EGYPT

Article 4, Volume 61, Issue 61, June 2014, Page 49-70  XML
Document Type: Original Research Papers
DOI: 10.12816/0005508
View on SCiNiTO View on SCiNiTO
Authors
S. M. Rabie1; A. A. Hussein1; G. A. Schaub2
1Zoology Department, Faculty of Science, South Valley University, Qena, Egypt
2Special Zoology Institute, Faculty of Biology, Ruhr University, Bochum, Germany
Abstract
The infection rates of coccidian blood parasites in the common lizards (Gekkonidae: Ptyodactylus hasselquistii, Tarentola annularis, Hemidactylus turcicus; Scincidae: Chalcides ocellatus, Chalcides sepsoides, Mabuya quinquetaeniata; Varanidae: Varanus niloticus and Lacertidae: Acanthodactylus boskianus) in Qena (Egypt) were investigated; 67 lizards (42%) out of 161 lizards were infected. The infection rate was 49% among males and 37% among females. The highest infection rate was found in the Gekkonidae P. hasselquistii (100%) and T. annularis (74%). However, 17% of H. turcicus, were parasitized. Meanwhile, in the Scincidae C. ocellatus, C. sepsoides and M. quinquetaeniata the percentage of the infection was 23%, 17% and 14%, respectively. Only one V. niloticus (Varanidae) was infected. None of A. boskianus (Lacertidae) were parasitized. Seasonal variations of infection rates seem to occur in T. annularis, in which high rates were found in summer (100%) and winter (77.8%). All P. hasselquistii were infected with Karyolysus sp., and 56% contained a mixed infection with Plasmodium sp., resulting in parasitaemia up to 14%. About 30% of T. annularis infections were due to Lankesterella sp., the others were due to Haemogregarina sp., both together infecting up to 6%. Lankesterella species was found in 0.02% of H. turcicus. The parasitaemia in Scincidae were 75% in C. ocellatus and 0.02% in C. sepsoides. In M. quinquetaeniata, up to 12% of blood cells possessed Hepatozoon sp. and in V. niloticus up to 0.5% was infected with Haemogregarina sp.
Keywords
Blood coccidia; Egyptian lizards; infection rate; Parasitaemia; Reptiles
Main Subjects
Herpetology and Ornithology; Protozoology and Parasitology
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