PARASITISM BY HELMINTHS IN THE GREY-SIDED VOLE (CLETHRIONOMYS RUFOCANUS) IN NORTHERN FINLAND: INFLUENCE OF DENSITY, HABITAT AND SEX OF THE HOST
- 1 April 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wildlife Disease Association in Journal of Wildlife Diseases
- Vol. 23 (2) , 233-241
- https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-23.2.233
Abstract
We have studied helminths from 532 gray-sided voles (Clethrionomys rufocanus) in two localities in northern Finland, representing different biogeographic zones, during 1978-1983. The helminth communities in the two study areas were similar, characterized by a small number of species (eight) compared to eastern Siberia [USSR] and Japan, and by the dominance of a single anoplocephalid cestode Andrya kalelai. The prevalence of this helminth varied significantly among habitats, possibly because of differences in the distribution and abundance of the intermediate hosts, oribatid mites. Vole density did not explain habitat differences in A. kalelai, nor did the prevalence of A. kalelai increase between 2 yr of sustained high density in the host population. A between-year increase in the prevalence of the larval cestode Taenia tenuicollis at Kilpisjarvi was probaly due to a simultaneous increase in the abundance of its definite hosts, mustelids. The prevalence of A. kalelai was always higher in males; no sexual differences were detected in the larval T. tenuicollis.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
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