Muehlenbein Michael P
Department of Anthropology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Am J Primatol. 2005 Feb;65(2):167-79. doi: 10.1002/ajp.20106.
Numerous intestinal parasites identified in populations of wild nonhuman primates can be pathogenic to humans. Furthermore, nonhuman primates are susceptible to a variety of human pathogens. Because of increasing human encroachment into previously nonimpacted forests, and the potential for disease transmission between human and nonhuman primate populations, further detailed investigations of primate ecological parasitology are warranted. For meaningful comparisons to be made, it is important for methods to be standardized across study sites. One aspect of methodological standardization is providing reliable estimates of parasite prevalence and knowing how many samples are needed to adequately estimate an individual's parasite prevalence. In this study the parasitic fauna of 37 adult, adolescent, and juvenile male chimpanzees from the Ngogo group, Kibale National Park, Uganda, were assessed from 121 fecal samples collected over a 3-month period. Twelve taxa of intestinal species (five helminth and seven protozoan) were recovered from the samples. The four most prevalent species were Troglodytella abrassarti (97.3%), Oesophagostomum sp. (81.1%), Strongyloides sp. (83.8%), and Entamoeba chattoni (70.3%). No one species was found in all samples from any one animal, and Troglodytella abrassarti, the most common intestinal organism, was found in all of the serial samples of only 69.4% of the chimpanzees. The cumulative species richness for individuals significantly increased for every sequential sample (up to three to four samples) taken per animal during this study. The results indicate that to accurately diagnose total intestinal infection and evaluate group prevalence, three to four sequential samples from each individual must be collected on nonconsecutive days. This conclusion applies only to short study periods in which possible seasonal effects are not taken into consideration. Validation of these results at different study sites in different regions with different climatic patterns is needed.
在野生非人类灵长类动物群体中发现的许多肠道寄生虫可能对人类致病。此外,非人类灵长类动物易感染多种人类病原体。由于人类对以前未受影响森林的侵占日益增加,以及人类与非人类灵长类动物群体之间疾病传播的可能性,有必要对灵长类生态寄生虫学进行进一步详细调查。为了进行有意义的比较,跨研究地点对方法进行标准化很重要。方法标准化的一个方面是提供寄生虫流行率的可靠估计,并知道需要多少样本才能充分估计个体的寄生虫流行率。在本研究中,从乌干达基巴莱国家公园恩戈戈群体的37只成年、青少年和幼年雄性黑猩猩中,对在3个月期间收集的121份粪便样本进行了寄生虫区系评估。从样本中发现了12种肠道物种(5种蠕虫和7种原生动物)。四种最常见的物种是阿氏穴体虫(97.3%)、食道口线虫属(81.1%)、类圆线虫属(83.8%)和查顿内阿米巴(70.3%)。在任何一只动物的所有样本中都未发现单一物种,最常见的肠道生物阿氏穴体虫仅在69.4%的黑猩猩的所有连续样本中被发现。在本研究中,每只动物每次连续采集的样本(最多三到四个样本),个体的累积物种丰富度显著增加。结果表明,为了准确诊断肠道总感染并评估群体流行率,必须在非连续的日子里从每个个体采集三到四个连续样本。这一结论仅适用于未考虑可能的季节影响的短期研究期。需要在不同地区、不同气候模式的不同研究地点对这些结果进行验证。