Adiaspores of the fungus Emmonsia crescens were detected microscopically in the lung tissue of 13% of 10,081 small mammals belonging to 24 species examined in 14 areas of the Czech Republic between 1986 and 1997; 441/1,934 (23%) Clethrionomys glareolus, 1/6 (17%) Arvicola terrestris, 357/2,172 (16%) Apodemus flavicollis, 220/1,981 (11%) A. sylvaticus, 23/265 (9%) A. microps, 11/81 (14%) Microtus subterraneus, 93/1,275 (7%) M. arvalis, 98/1,439 (7%) M. agrestis, 1/3 (33%) Ondatra zibethicus, 1/1 Cricetus cricetus, 1/20 (5%) Crocidura suaveolens, 2/40 (5%) Neomys fodiens, and 13/529 (2%) Sorex araneus were infected. Emmonsiosis was not recorded among the species of rodents that do not build their nests in the soil (Muscardinus avellanarius, Micromys minutus, Mus musculus, Rattus norvegicus). The overall prevalence of emmonsiosis was significantly higher in adult (19%) than in juvenile (7%) mammals, and in rodents (13%, and 20% in adults) than in insectivores (2%, and 4% in adults). The frequency of infected mammals also varied according to geographic area, altitude, habitat, and season.
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April 01 1999
EMMONSIOSIS OF WILD RODENTS AND INSECTIVORES IN CZECHLAND Open Access
Zdeněk Hubálek
Zdeněk Hubálek
Department of Medical Zoology, Institute of Vertebrate Biology, Academy of Sciences, Květná 8, CZ-60365 Brno, Czech Republic (e-mail:[email protected])
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J Wildl Dis (1999) 35 (2): 243–249.
Article history
Received:
July 13 1998
Citation
Zdeněk Hubálek; EMMONSIOSIS OF WILD RODENTS AND INSECTIVORES IN CZECHLAND. J Wildl Dis 1 January 1999; 35 (2): 243–249. doi: https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-35.2.243
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