Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ivan Literák is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ivan Literák.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2008

Blackbirds and song thrushes constitute a key reservoir of Borrelia garinii, the causative agent of borreliosis in Central Europe.

Veronika Taragelova; Juraj Koči; Klára Hanincová; Klaus Kurtenbach; Markéta Derdáková; Nicholas H. Ogden; Ivan Literák; Elena Kocianová; Milan Labuda

ABSTRACT Blackbirds (Turdus merula) and song thrushes (Turdus philomelos) were found to carry 95% of all spirochete-infected tick larvae among 40 bird species captured in Central Europe. More than 90% of the infections were typed as Borrelia garinii and Borrelia valaisiana. We conclude that thrushes are key players in the maintenance of these spirochete species in this region of Central Europe.


Research in Veterinary Science | 2008

Antimicrobial resistant Escherichia coli isolates in cattle and house sparrows on two Czech dairy farms.

Monika Dolejska; D. Šenk; Alois Čížek; J. Rybaříková; Oldřich Sychra; Ivan Literák

Rectal smears of calves, cows and young bulls, as well as cloacal smears of house sparrows (Passer domesticus), from farms at the villages of Sumice and Troskotovice, Czech Republic, were examined for E. coli resistant to 12 antimicrobials. The resistant isolates were tested for antimicrobial-resistance genes and integrons. Totals of 40% (n=183), 3% (n=95), 0% (n=33), and 9% (n=54) of Escherichia coli isolates from calves, cows, young bulls and house sparrows, respectively, were antimicrobial resistant. The following genes were identified in cattle E. coli isolates: tetA, tetB (isolates resistant to tetracycline), bla(TEM) (beta-lactams), strA, aadA (streptomycin), sul1, sul2 (sulphonamides), and cat, floR (chloramphenicol). Seven of 16 antimicrobial-resistant calf isolates from the Sumice farm possessed class 1 integrons with the aadA1 gene cassette integrated, 1 kb in size. On the Troskotovice farm, eight of 57 antimicrobial-resistant calf isolates possessed class 1 integrons. Integrons of 1.5kb with the dhfr1- aadA1 gene cassette were found in four isolates, followed by a 1kb integron with the aadA1 gene found in three isolates, and a 1.7kb integron with the dhfr17-aadA5 gene cassette and the phenotype ASSuTSxtNaCipCCfG. The prevalence of resistant E. coli in calves compared to adult cattle was much higher and probably was influenced by oral antimicrobial usage in calves, feeding with milk and colostrum from treated cows, as well as mechanisms unrelated to antimicrobial drug selection. Although house sparrows lived together with the cattle and came into contact with cattle waste on the farm, they were not infected by resistant E. coli isolates with the same characteristics as those found in cattle.


Letters in Applied Microbiology | 2008

Lawsonia intracellularis in rodents from pig farms with the occurrence of porcine proliferative enteropathy.

M. Friedman; V. Bednář; J. Klimeš; J. Smola; V. Mrlík; Ivan Literák

Aim:u2002 Lawsonia intracellularis is an obligate intracellular bacterium causing proliferative enteropathy in certain species of domestic, laboratory and captive animals. The aim of our study was to detect L. intracellularis in free‐living rodents from pig farms in the Czech Republic.


Veterinary Parasitology | 2008

Chewing lice (Phthiraptera) on chickens (Gallus gallus) from small backyard flocks in the eastern part of the Czech Republic

Oldřich Sychra; P. Harmat; Ivan Literák

One hundred and sixty chickens (Gallus gallus) from 31 small, private backyard flocks in the eastern part of the Czech Republic were examined for chewing lice (Phthiraptera: Amblycera, Ischnocera). At least one species of chewing lice was found on every bird examined. Seven species of chewing lice were identified in all; they had the following prevalences and mean intensities: Goniocotes gallinae (100%; 110 lice), Menopon gallinae (88%; 50), Menacanthus stramineus (48%; 17), Lipeurus caponis (35%; 12), Menacanthus cornutus (12%; 9), Cuclotogaster heterographus (1%; 4) and Goniocotes microthorax (1%; 3). Just two birds from a single flock were heavily infested with the ischnoceran species G. gallinae.


Avian Pathology | 2008

Avipoxvirus in blackcaps (Sylvia atricapilla)

Pavel Kulich; Eva Roubalová; Lenka Zdražilová Dubská; Oldřich Sychra; Bedřich Šmíd; Ivan Literák

From July to September 2005, 1075 wild birds of 37 species were mist-netted at a location in the north-eastern part of the Czech Republic. The birds were examined for the presence of avipoxvirus lesions. This was demonstrated by electron microscopy in skin lesions in nine of 244 blackcaps (Sylvia atricapilla) examined (4% prevalence). Blackcaps skin bioptates were processed using the ultrathin section method. In skin bioptates, avipoxviruses were demonstrated in intracytoplasmic inclusions where, in addition to mature viruses, lipids and filamentous structures concentrated into large circular formations were found. The so-called additional inclusions were also found. These did not contain any virus components, and they served as the precursor of A-type intracytoplasmic inclusions. Blackcap avipoxvirus was isolated by passage on the chorioallantoic membrane of 9-day-old chicken embryos. The virus was successfully adapted after 11 passages (each passage lasted 5 to 7 days), at which time a marked changes in the form of tiny nodules 2 to 3 mm in diameter were observed on the chorioallantoic membrane. Further identification of field isolates and of the cultured virus was carried out using polymerase chain reaction and sequencing. Sequences were compared with consensus sequences of both canarypoxviruses and fowlpoxviruses. Our sequence was found to be 98.8% identical to the canarypox consensus sequence, but only 63% identical to the fowlpox consensus sequence. Our avipoxvirus sequence was proven to be significantly more closely related to canarypoxviruses than to fowlpoxviruses also by phylogenetic analysis.


Experimental and Applied Acarology | 2008

Larvae of chigger mites Neotrombicula spp. (Acari: Trombiculidae) exhibited Borrelia but no Anaplasma infections: a field study including birds from the Czech Carpathians as hosts of chiggers.

Ivan Literák; Alexandr A. Stekolnikov; Oldrich Sychra; Lenka Zdražilová Dubská; Veronika Taragelova

Chigger mites were collected from 1,080 wild birds of 37 species at Certak (Czech Republic), in the western Carpathian Mountains, from 29 July to 24 September 2005. The prevalence of infestation with chigger larvae was 7%. A total of 325 chigger specimens from 10 bird species was identified and three chigger species were found: Neotrombicula autumnalis, N.xa0carpathica, and N.xa0inopinata, the latter two species being reported on new hosts. Neotrombicula carpathica is reported in the Czech Republic for the first time. A total of 509 chigger larvae found on 79 host specimens were examined by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for the presence of Borrelia burgdorferi s.l. DNA (fragments of the rrf (5S)—rrl (23S) intergenic spacer), and Anaplasma phagocytophilum DNA (epank1 gene). A fragment of specific Borrelia DNA was amplified through PCR in one sample, and the PCR product was further analyzed by reverse line blotting assay, whereby both genospecies of B.xa0garinii and B.xa0valaisiana were proved. This sample pooled five chigger larvae collected from one Sylvia atricapilla on 11 August 2005. No A.xa0phagocytophilum DNA was amplified. We conclude that larvae of the genus Neotrombicula can be infected with Borrelia genospecies originated from their present or former hosts.


International Journal of Acarology | 2008

A review of mites of the genus Neharpyrhynchus Fain (Acari: Harpirhynchidae) — ectoparasites of wild birds, including description of four new species

Jana Martinu; Frantisek Dusbabek; Ivan Literák

Abstract Seven species of the genus Neharpyrhynchus Fain, 1972 (Acari: Harpirhynchidae) are recorded on European birds, including four described in this paper as new: TV. bochkovi n. sp., N. pari n. sp., N. schoenobaenus n. sp. and N spinus n. sp. Based on external morphology of European species, as well as of the extraeuropean species N. baile (Bochkov, Literak and Capek, 2007), N squamiferus (Fain, 1972) and N. trochilinus (Fain, 1972), five species groups (i.e., N baile group, N. hippolae group, N pilirostris group, N. plumaris group and N. squamiferus group) are described. The prevalence of bird infestation by individual European Neharpyrhynchus species is defined according to recent field examinations in the Czech Republic and on the border between Slovakia and Poland. A key for determining females of all known species is included.


International Journal of Acarology | 2008

Description of the life stages of Harpyrhynchoides rubeculinus (Cerny and Sixl, 1971) (Prostigmata: Harpirhynchidae)

Andre V. Bochkov; Ivan Literák

Abstract The external morphology of all postembryonic instars of the harpirhynchid mite Harpyrhynchoides rubeculinus (Cerny and Sixl, 1971) (Acari: Prostigmata: Harpirhynchidae) parasitizing the European robin, Erithacus rubecula (L.) (Passeriformes: Muscicapidae), in the Czech Republic is described and figured in detail.


Acta Parasitologica | 2008

The identity of Menacanthus eisenachensis Balát (Insecta, Phthiraptera, Amblycera, Menoponidae) from the Reed Warbler (Passeriformes, Sylviidae)

Oldr ich Sychra; Jens-Kjeld Jensen; Michael de L. Brooke; Alfréd Trnka; Petr Procházka; Ivan Literák

Three hundred and thirty-one Reed Warblers Acrocephalus scirpaceus (Hermann) were examined for chewing lice (Phthiraptera). Twenty-eight (8.5%) were parasitized with Menacanthus curuccae (Schrank, 1776). Mean intensity of infestation was 4.3 lice. Hence, the name Menacanthus eisenachensis Balát, 1981, currently applied to Menacanthus lice parasitizing Reed Warblers, is placed as a junior synonym of M. curuccae, with Reed Warbler as a new host for the latter species.


Zootaxa | 2008

New feather mites of the subfamily Pterodectinae (Acari: Astigmata: Proctophyllodidae) from passerines (Aves: Passeriformes) in Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil

Sergey V. Mironov; Ivan Literák; Miroslav Capek

Collaboration


Dive into the Ivan Literák's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Oldřich Sychra

University of Veterinary and Pharmaceutical Sciences Brno

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andre V. Bochkov

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sergey V. Mironov

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alois Čížek

University of Veterinary and Pharmaceutical Sciences Brno

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eva Roubalová

University of Veterinary and Pharmaceutical Sciences Brno

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Frantisek Dusbabek

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Klimeš

University of Veterinary and Pharmaceutical Sciences Brno

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge