Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (Mar 2023)

Effects of Land-Use and Environmental Factors on Snail Distribution and Trematode Infection in Ethiopia

  • Seid Tiku Mereta,
  • Samson Wakuma Abaya,
  • Fikirte Demissie Tulu,
  • Kebede Takele,
  • Mahmud Ahmednur,
  • Girma Alemu Melka,
  • Mark Nanyingi,
  • Hannah Rose Vineer,
  • John Graham-Brown,
  • Cyril Caminade,
  • Siobhan M. Mor

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed8030154
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
p. 154

Abstract

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Freshwater snails are intermediate hosts for several snail-borne diseases affecting humans and animals. Understanding the distribution of snail intermediate hosts and their infection status is very important to plan and implement effective disease prevention and control interventions. In this study, we determined the abundance, distribution, and trematode infection status of freshwater snails in two agro-ecological zones of Ethiopia. We sampled snails from 13 observation sites and examined them for trematode infections using a natural cercarial shedding method. A redundancy analysis (RDA) was used to examine the relationship between snail abundance and environmental variables. Overall, a total of 615 snails belonging to three species were identified. Lymnea natalensis and Bulinus globosus were the dominant snail species, representing 41% and 40% of the total collection, respectively. About one-third of the total snail population (33%) shed cercariae. The cercariae species recorded were Xiphidiocercaria, Brevifurcate apharyngeate distome (BAD), Echinostome, and Fasciola. Snail species were found in high abundance in aquatic habitats located in the agricultural landscape. Therefore, land-use planning and protection of aquatic habitats from uncontrolled human activities and pollution can be considered as important strategies to prevent and control the spread of snail-borne diseases in the region.

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