Publications by authors named "Sebastian Munoz-Leal"

The tick fauna of El Salvador is currently represented by 10 species of hard ticks (family Ixodidae) and 2 species of soft ticks (family Argasidae). This study aimed to report new and additional records of ticks and rickettsiae in El Salvador. During 2019-2021, a total of 216 specimens of ticks were collected from eight host species (domestic and wild animals) and in the environment among 15 geographic localities of El Salvador.

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Background: Bacteria of the genus Borrelia are agents of disease in both domestic animals and humans and pose a significant public health risk. Borrelia species have complex transmission cycles, often using rodents as vertebrate reservoir hosts. These bacteria are classified into three well-defined monophyletic groups: Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato (Bbsl) complex, the relapsing fever (RF) group, and a third group associated with reptiles and echidnas.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study focuses on the genetic diversity of a common tapeworm that infects cats and rodents, specifically researching its presence in the Americas, where little is known about it.
  • Using DNA barcoding, researchers analyzed samples from invasive black rats and a small native felid, revealing only two haplotypes, indicating low genetic variability.
  • The results suggest a connection to the tapeworm's arrival in the Americas during Spanish colonization, highlighting its relationships to populations from other regions and offering new insights into its biogeography and evolutionary history.
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  • Soft ticks of the Pavlovskyella subgenus, recognized as parasites of medical significance, face taxonomic challenges due to evidence of paraphyly among species.
  • A new species has been identified on a fox in central Chile, characterized by unique larval features including a subpyriform dorsal plate and specific setae arrangement.
  • Phylogenetic analyses reveal that South American Pavlovskyella species appear to be paraphyletic, indicating the need for further research to clarify the group's taxonomy.
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  • - Lyme disease is the most common tick-borne illness in the Northern Hemisphere, while Brazil has seen claims of a separate Lyme-like condition known as Baggio-Yoshinari syndrome (BYS) since the 1990s, although its existence remains debated.
  • - Researchers reviewed 35 years of literature on BYS, analyzing 199 reported human cases and studies on ticks and animals to evaluate the condition's validity in Brazil.
  • - The conclusion drawn from the review is that there is insufficient evidence to support the existence of Lyme borreliosis or BYS in Brazil due to issues in diagnostic methods, raising concerns about their reliability and accuracy.
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The genus is notably diverse within the family Argasidae, comprising approximately 134 species distributed among 4 subgenera, 1 of which is the subgenus . In an earlier study, we identified distinct soft ticks as () sp., which were collected from animal shelters in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan.

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Syngamid worms (Nematoda: Syngamidae) parasitizing birds of prey are considered cosmopolitan, but the efforts to understand their biology and systematics are restricted to the Holarctic region. However, in the Neotropical region there is only one recent record with no data about its molecular characterization or its significance to the health of its hosts. Thus, this study aimed to identify through an integrative approach the Syngamid worms parasitizing a native owl, and to describe its pathological consequences.

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Accumulation of DNA sequence data and its use in systematics of the family Argasidae reveals new incongruencies between genera and subgenera, since several groups defined by classical taxonomy appear to be paraphyletic, which is the case of the subgenus Pavlovskyella. In order to identify morphological characters unique to one of the monophyletic groupings within Pavlovskyella and improve its system, we describe all active stages of Ornithodoros (Pavlovskyella) tartakovskyi, a species with an incomplete original description. Larvae, nymphs, males and females from Iran were examined with scanning electron microscopy (SEM).

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There is limited knowledge about tick diversity in the Amazon region. Here, we survey small terrestrial mammals for tick infestation at the Rio Pardo settlement, Amazonas State, Brazil. Sampling included rainy and dry seasons and four ecotones (primary forest, forest in regeneration, field crops and households).

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This study aimed to detect, isolate and to characterize by molecular methods a relapsing fever group (RFG) in white-eared opossums () from Brazil. During 2015-2018, when opossums ( spp.) were captured in six municipalities of the state of São Paulo, Brazil, molecular analyses revealed the presence of a novel RFG sp.

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Background: Ticks are obligate hematophagous ectoparasites involved in transmitting viruses of public health importance. The objective of this work was to identify the Jingmen tick virus in hard ticks from the Colombian Caribbean, an arbovirus of importance for public health.

Methods: Ticks were collected in rural areas of Córdoba and Cesar, Colombia.

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Article Synopsis
  • Tick-borne diseases pose serious health risks to both animals and humans, with Canine Monocytic Ehrlichiosis (CME) and Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever (RMSF) being significant concerns in canine and human populations.
  • A study conducted in Ceará State, Brazil, sampled 208 dogs to assess the presence of Ehrlichia canis and Rickettsia spp., and identified the tick species infesting these dogs.
  • Findings showed a higher infection rate of E. canis in Sobral (9.9%) compared to Alcântaras (5.6%), with Rhipicephalus sanguineus as the most common tick species, and indicated a low risk of exposure to Rickettsia
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Tick-borne infectious agents (TBIAs) include several bacteria and protozoa that can infect vertebrates, including humans. Some of these agents can cause important diseases from both a public health perspective, such as Lyme disease, and from an animal health and production viewpoint, such as Texas fever. In Chile, several studies have assessed the presence of tick-borne disease agents in vectors and mammal hosts, mainly in the northern regions, but few studies have assessed the presence of these agents in Central and Southern Chile.

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In this study, we report soft ticks from bat-inhabiting caves in different areas of Brazil. From 2010 to 2019, we collected 807 tick specimens from nine caves located in four Brazilian states among two biomes. Ticks were morphologically identified as Antricola guglielmonei (282 specimens), Ornithodoros cavernicolous (260 specimens), and Ornithodoros fonsecai (265 specimens).

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Background: The study of parasites provides insight into intricate ecological relationships in ecosystem dynamics, food web structures, and evolution on multiple scales. Hepatozoon Eucoccidiorida: Hepatozoidae) is a genus of protozoan hemoparasites with heteroxenous life cycles that switch infections between vertebrates and blood-feeding invertebrates. The most comprehensive review of the genus was published 26 years ago, and currently there are no harmonized data on the epizootiology, diagnostics, genotyping methods, evolutionary relationships, and genetic diversity of Hepatozoon in the Americas.

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  • - The study investigated the presence of antibodies to 13 livestock and zoonotic pathogens in 164 southern pudu deer in Chile from 2011 to 2023, revealing that 20.18% of wild and 30.91% of captive pudus showed exposure to these pathogens.
  • - It found that fawn pudus are at a higher risk of infection compared to adults, and those living in free-range conditions are less likely to contract certain parasites.
  • - This research marks the first evidence of livestock pathogen exposure in South American wildlife, indicating potential livestock-to-wildlife transmission in Chile’s temperate forests, and linking a past zoo outbreak to abortions among captive pudus.
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Introduction: Herpesvirus infections have been highlighted as emerging diseases affecting wildlife health and the conservation of several taxa. Malignant catarrhal fever (MCF) and infectious keratoconjunctivitis (IKC) are two viruses that infect wild ruminants. Nevertheless, epidemiological data on herpesviruses in South American wild ruminants are limited.

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Tick-borne relapsing fever spirochetes of genus Borrelia thrive in enzootic cycles involving Ornithodoros spp. (Argasidae) mainly, and rodents. The isolation of these spirochetes usually involves a murine model in which ticks are fed and the spirochetes detected in blood several days later.

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Ticks are obligate hematophagous parasites that can transmit to vertebrate hosts several pathogens, including viruses, bacteria, protozoa and helminths. Among these agents, some Borrelia species some Borrelia species cause disease in humans and other vertebrate hosts; therefore, they have medical and veterinary health importance. To gather additional information on Borrelia species in Brazil, the current study aimed to detect the presence of these species in Ornithodoros cavernicolous ticks collected in September 2019 from cement pipes that are used by bats as shelter in a farm located in the midwestern region of Brazil.

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Background: The genus Borrelia comprises pathogenic species of bacteria that pose a significant risk to public health. Borrelia spp. are emerging or reemerging infectious agents worldwide with complex transmission cycles, and many species use rodents as vertebrate reservoir hosts.

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Babesia spp. are tick-borne protozoans that involve birds and mammals in their transmission cycles and cause babesiosis, a severe hemolytic malaria-like disease. Opossums of the genus Didelphis are recognized hosts of tick-borne pathogens.

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Soft ticks (Argasidae) of the Pavlovskyella Pospelova-Shtrom subgenus are important vectors of relapsing fever spirochetes, which are agents of disease globally. South American representatives of the Pavlovskyella subgenus include 3 species: Ornithodoros (Pavlovskyella) brasiliensis Aragão, Ornithodoros (Pavlovskyella) furcosus Neumann, and Ornithodoros (Pavlovskyella) rostratus Aragão. Here, we describe a fourth species based on morphological and mitogenomic evidence of ticks collected in burrows of unknown hosts in central Chile.

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In Chile, studies of parasites from the family Sarcocystidae (Apicomplexa) have mostly been related to domestic animals. We aimed to assess the presence of Sarcocystidae taxa in cricetid rodents from Central and Southern Chile. We studied 207 rodents, encompassing six species, from 13 localities.

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