摘要:Dracunculus spp. are parasitic nematodes that infect numerous species of mammals and reptiles. The life cycles of
Dracunculus species are complex, and unknowns remain regarding the role of paratenic and transport hosts in transmission to definitive hosts. We had two primary objectives: to assess the susceptibility of several species of anurans, lizards, and fish as paratenic hosts for
Dracunculus species, and to determine the long-term persistence of
Dracunculus infections in African clawed frogs (
Xenopus laevis). Animals were orally exposed to copepods infected with infectious third-stage larvae (L3s) of either
Dracunculus insignis or
D. medinensis.
Dracunculus L3s were recovered from four anuran species, two lizard species, and one fish species, demonstrating that
Dracunculus can infect tissues of a diversity of species. In long-term persistence trials,
D. medinensis L3s were recovered from African clawed frogs tissues up to 58 days post-infection, and
D. insignis L3s were recovered up to 244 days post-infection. Our findings regarding the susceptibility of novel species of frogs, lizards, and fish to infection with
Dracunculus nematodes, and long-term persistence of L3s in paratenic hosts, address pressing knowledge gaps regarding
Dracunculus infection in paratenic hosts and may guide future research regarding the transmission of
Dracunculus to definitive mammalian hosts.