International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife (Dec 2021)

Taenia laticollis and a potentially novel Taenia species from the Eurasian lynx (Lynx) in Northwestern China

  • Gang Liu,
  • Shanshan Zhao,
  • Sándor Hornok,
  • Xueling Chen,
  • Suwen Wang,
  • Wenbo Tan,
  • Xinli Gu,
  • Yuanzhi Wang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16
pp. 183 – 186

Abstract

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The Eurasian lynx (Lynx) is a medium-sized wild cat species distributed throughout Eurasia. There has been no report on Taenia species (Cestoda: Cyclophyllidea) infecting this felid in China. In this study, 24 tapeworms were found in two Eurasian lynxes (#1 and #2) in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region (XUAR), northwestern China. Based on the number, measurements and the shape of rostellar hooks, these tapeworms belong to two Taenia species. According to the number (n = 32) and length (185–194 μm) of small hooks, the first Taenia species (n = 1, found in #2 lynx) was identified as Taenia laticollis. Phylogenetically, this species was clustered with T. laticollis genotype C (JX860623) based on its cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (cox1) and 16S rDNA sequences. The second Taenia species (n = 23, provisionally named as “Taenia sp.“) may represent a potentially novel tapeworm species, because of its obvious differences in the shape and lengths (174–182 μm, 98–113 μm) of large and small rostellar hooks in comparison with ten taxonomically related species. Molecular and phylogenetic analyses of the cox1 gene revealed that “Taenia sp.” has the highest rate of sequence identity (92.93%, 368/396 bp) with Taenia hydatigena reported from sheep (Ovis aries) in Slovakia. To sum up, a potentially novel tapeworm species, “Taenia sp.“, is found in Eurasian lynx. In addition, T. laticollis was found for the first time in China.

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