Cassandra de Moraes Monteiro
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
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Parasitology Research | 2011
Cassandra de Moraes Monteiro; Jose Felipe Ribeiro Amato; Suzana B. Amato
Forty-seven specimens of Neotropical cormorants, Phalacrocorax brasilianus, from Lago Guaíba, Guaíba, State of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil (30° 00′ S, 51°15′ W), were examined for helminth parasites between 1999 and 2003. Twenty species of helminth parasites were found: ten digeneans: Austrodiplostomum mordax, Austrodiplostomum compactum, Clinostomum sp., Drepanocephalus olivaceus, Drepanocephalus spathans, Hysteromorpha triloba, Ignavia olivacei, Paryphostomum segregatum, Prosthogonimus ovatus, and Ribeiroia ondatrae; one cestode: Paradilepis caballeroi; eight nematodes: Contracaecum rudolphii, Eucoleus contortus, Eustrongylides sp., Ornithocapillaria appendiculata, Syngamus sp., Syncuaria squamata, Tetrameres (Gynaecophila) sp., and one undetermined capillariid (genus and species); and one acanthocephalan: Andracantha tandemtesticulata. The length and weight of male and female birds, as well as their sexual maturity (juvenile or adult), did not show significant difference regarding the helminth fauna; the standard length did not influence the helminth parasite indices. The prevalence of I. olivacei was higher in larger birds while the intensity of infection by this digenean species was higher in females. The abundance of P. caballeroi was higher in male birds. A. mordax and H. triloba showed higher prevalence and abundance in juvenile hosts, while O. appendiculata was more abundant in juveniles. The remaining species did not have their parasite indices influenced by the host parameters studied. The present work records the richest helminth fauna for any bird of the genus Phalacrocorax and is the first study to evaluate the influence of length, weight, sex, and maturity state on parasitism.
Revista Brasileira De Zoologia | 2006
Jose Felipe Ribeiro Amato; Cassandra de Moraes Monteiro; Suzana B. Amato
The present report is part of a larger study on the helminth fauna of Neotropical Cormorants, Phalacrocorax brasilianus (Gmelin, 1789) in Brazil, particularly, in the southernmost State of Rio Grande do Sul. The nematodes which were found loose in the proventriculus/ventriculus or in groups of adults of different ages and of L3 and L4 larval stages, forming eosinophylic granulomas had a prevalence of 100% in 47 Neotropical cormorants from Lago Guaiba, Municipality of Guaiba. The morphology of the labia/interlabia, the distribution pattern of the caudal papillae in males examined under scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and the tips of the spicules allowed determination of the species as Contracaecum rudolphii Hartwich, 1964 sensu lato (s. l.). This is the first record of C. rudolphii in southern Brazil.
Revista Brasileira De Zoologia | 2007
Cassandra de Moraes Monteiro; Jose Felipe Ribeiro Amato; Suzana B. Amato
Revista Brasileira De Zoologia | 2007
Cassandra de Moraes Monteiro; Jose Felipe Ribeiro Amato; Suzana B. Amato
Revista Brasileira De Zoologia | 2006
Cassandra de Moraes Monteiro; Jose Felipe Ribeiro Amato; Suzana B. Amato
Revista Brasileira De Zoologia | 2006
Cassandra de Moraes Monteiro; Jose Felipe Ribeiro Amato; Suzana B. Amato
Archive | 2015
Gabriela Lopes Rassier; Tatiana Cheuiche Pesenti; Joaber Pereira Júnior; Diego Silva da Silva; Emília Welter Wendt; Cassandra de Moraes Monteiro; Maria Elizabeth Aires Berne
Neotropical helminthology | 2015
Emília Welter Wendt; Cassandra de Moraes Monteiro
Archive | 2007
Cassandra de Moraes Monteiro; Jose Felipe Ribeiro Amato; Suzana B. Amato
Revista Brasileira De Zoologia | 2006
Jose Felipe Ribeiro Amato; Cassandra de Moraes Monteiro; Suzana B. Amato