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Revista de la Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias
versión impresa ISSN 0258-6576
Resumen
BETHENCOURT, Angélica M et al. Prevalence and Abundance of Digestive Strongyles Eggs and Eimeria spp. Oocysts in Water Buffaloes Naturally Infected. Rev. Fac. Cienc. Vet. [online]. 2013, vol.54, n.1, pp.17-28. ISSN 0258-6576.
The breeding of water buffaloes (Bubalus bubalis) has become an increasingly important and common livestock in Venezuela; however, conditions such as gastrointestinal parasitism are one of the major constraints in the development of this species, with a negative impact on meat and milk production. The main etiologic agents responsible for this condition are digestive strongyles (Nematoda: Strongylida) and coccidia of the genus Eimeria (Sporozoa: Eucoccidida). This investigation evaluated the behavior of these infections in buffaloes of different age and sex. Samples were collected and examined monthly by the quantitative McMaster technique. The buffaloes were subdivided into four age groups (animals between 8 and 18 months of age, over 18 months, males and female buffaloes), the animals came from a commercial flock of the State of Falcon, Venezuela. The results show that the most prevalent parasites were strongyles and coccidian, 25.2% and 46.2%, respectively. The flock abundance was 38±41.1 eggs per gram (EPG) for strongyles and 142.4±117.2 oocysts per gram (OPG) forcoccidia. There were statistical differences (p <0.05) between age groups and sex of the buffalo, when comparing the values of prevalence and abundance of infections for gastrointestinal strongyles and coccidia. The prevalence and abundance values decreased, with increasing age of the animals tested (strongyles: prevalence of 39.5; 34.0; 42.3; 15.8% and abundance of 79.8; 47.2; 30.8; 12.2 EPG; coccidian: prevalence of 71.3; 54.8; 38.5; 34.0% and abundance of 379.1; 121.0; 44.2; 47.6 OPG), being higher in males than in females (strongyles: prevalence of 36.2 and 22.4%, and abundance of 70.5 and 30.9 EPG; coccidian: prevalence of 57.3 and 43.6% and abundance of 166.3 and 131.5 OPG). The highest parasitic loads and the clinically important infections were seen in 8 to 18 months old buffaloes (counts higher than 500 EPG and 5,050 OPG). Environmental conditions fell within favorable ranges (25.6-29.3ºC of temperature, 77.0-89.0% of relative humidity and 1.0-151.3 mm of precipitation) for the development of infective parasite forms of both digestive strongyles and coccidian.
Palabras clave : Water buffaloes; gastroenteritis; nematode infections; coccidia; prevalence; Falcón.












