Mammalian toxoplasmosis in birds |
| |
Authors: | Reginald D. Manwell Hans P. Drobeck |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Zoology, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York USA |
| |
Abstract: | Naturally occurring infections with Toxoplasma have been sought in several species of wild birds, and one case has been found in a locally caught pigeon—the first known demonstration of toxoplasmosis of the mammalian type in birds in eastern North America. Experimental infections with a strain of Toxoplasma of human origin have been studied in pigeons, song sparrows, grackles, and chickens. Some of the birds became acutely ill and died within a few days or a week; others became chronically ill and exhibited no symptoms during the period of observation which, for certain birds, lasted more than 6 months. There was no indication that the parasites were in any way modified by such prolonged exposure to conditions in the avian host, except where chicks were experimentally employed. In the latter case, there was a definite indication of lessened virulence after twenty serial passages.Grackles with experimental infections exhibited an easily demonstrable parasitemia for at least as long as 5 days, during which as little as 0.1 ml of their blood was infective to mice.Two young pigeons, fed for 2 weeks by a mother with an acute case of toxoplasmosis, failed to become infected, but proved susceptible when later inoculated with parasites. They developed a chronic infection, characterized by a rise of antibodies in much the same fashion as in mammals having the disease. The antibody curve remained high for the entire period of observation (6 months).Mouse brains from experimentally induced cases of toxoplasmosis remained infective for as long as 18 days when stored in an ordinary electric refrigerator and immersed in sterile Difco skim milk. Exposure to higher temperatures however showed that 55 °C for 5 minutes is lethal to the parasite, and that in some cases they are no longer viable after an exposure of equal duration to 50 °C. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|