Theileria parva: variation in the infection rate of the vector tick, Rhipicephalus appendiculatus |
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Authors: | R E Purnell M A Ledger P L Omwoyo R C Payne M A Peirce |
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Abstract: | The variation in Theileria parva infection rates of experimental batches of adult Rhipicephalus appendiculatus ticks, used during the course of several years, was examined. It was found that considerable variation occurred, but that this could not always be correlated with the piroplasm parasitaemia in the cattle on which the ticks engorged as nymphs. Statistical analysis showed that the infection rate of ticks fed on cattle with a parasitaemia of 41–50 per cent was significantly higher than that of ticks fed on cattle with lower parasitaemias. A number of experiments were then carried out in which one or several factors of this aspect of the host-parasite relationship remained constant whilst others were altered. None of these factors was seen to play a major part in the variation. Finally, randomly selected groups of 10 ticks which had dropped engorged as nymphs from the same animal on the same day were examined. The variation observed even in these groups was so great that it was concluded that the infection rate could depend on a factor such as the juxtaposition of possibly-infected gut epithelial cells and developing salivary glands during the nymphal moult. |
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Keywords: | piroplasm parasitaemia salivary glands |
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