10 results on '"Reck, José"'
Search Results
2. Serosurvey of West Nile virus (WNV) in free-ranging raptors from Brazil
- Author
-
Morel, Ana Paula, Webster, Anelise, Zitelli, Larissa Calo, Umeno, Karen, Souza, Ugo Araújo, Prusch, Fabiane, Anicet, Marina, Marsicano, Gleide, Bandarra, Paulo, Trainini, Gustavo, Stocker, Julian, Giani, Denise, Fortes, Flávia Borges, Goenaga, Silvina, and Reck, José
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Molecular survey of Rickettsia spp. in the Neotropical deer tick Haemaphysalis juxtakochi from Brazilian Pampa
- Author
-
Souza, Ugo, Dall’Agnol, Bruno, Michel, Thais, Webster, Anelise, Weck, Barbara, Doyle, Rovaina, Kasper, Carlos B., Soares, João, Martins, João Ricardo, Trigo, Tatiane C., Ott, Ricardo, Jardim, Márcia M. A., and Reck, José
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Comparative biology between a tropical-equatorial and temperate population of Rhipicephalus microplus from Brazil.
- Author
-
Tavares, Caio P, Sousa, Isabella C, Gomes, Matheus N, Mesquita-Sousa, Dauana, Faccini, João L. H., Reck, José, Costa-Junior, Livio M., and Luz, Hermes R.
- Abstract
In the present study, we evaluated and compared the in vitro biological parameters of the evolutionary stages of R. microplus (female, eggs, and larva) from two extreme regions of Brazil: Santa Rita (SR) northeast region and Bagé (BG) southern region. For this, all stages were maintained at 23, 27, and 32°C with a relative humidity (RH) of 65, 80, and 100%. The mean incubation period was 43.7 to 53.7 days (SR population) and 59.0 to 56.1 days (BG population) at 23°C and 18.0 to 19.3 days (SR population) and 16.8 to 21.2 days (BG population) at 32°C. Eggs incubated at 23°C (65, 80, and 100% RH) of SR and BG populations showed a similar egg hatching percentage (P > 0.05). The egg hatching percentage of the SR population (30.5 to 98.0%) was always higher than that of the BG population (8.7 to 85.5%; P < 0.05) when incubated at 32°C and 65, 80, or 100% RH. Deleterious effects on the larval survival period from SR and BG were observed under all experimental conditions (temperature and RH), especially at 23 and 32°C. However, they were more intense on larvae at 32°C (all RH). Under 80 and 100% RH, the mean period of larval survival did not exceed 65 days, being shortest for the BG population (mean: 42.7 days [80% RH] and 55.1 days [100% RH]) compared with the SR population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato in Ixodes longiscutatus ticks from Brazilian Pampa.
- Author
-
Dall’Agnol, Bruno, Michel, Thaís, Weck, Bárbara, Souza, Ugo Araújo, Webster, Anelise, Leal, Bruna Ferreira, Klafke, Guilherme Marcondes, Martins, João Ricardo, Ott, Ricardo, Venzal, José Manuel, Ferreira, Carlos Alexandre Sanchez, and Reck, José
- Abstract
Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato (s.l.) complex includes the agents of Lyme disease/borreliosis in North America, Europe, and Asia, such Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto, Borrelia afzelii , Borrelia garinii , Borrelia bavariensis , Borrelia spielmanii , Borrelia bissettiae , and Borrelia mayonii . In 2013 B. burgdorferi s.l. was reported for the first time in the Neotropical region, from Ixodes aragaoi ticks in Uruguayan Pampa. In addition, from 2011 to 2016, 17 suspected human cases of borreliosis-like syndrome were reported in Rio Grande do Sul (RS) state, Brazil, which contains only part of country in the Pampa biome. The goal of this work is to report the results of a state surveillance program conducted in order to investigate the presence of B. burgdorferi s.l. in its classic vector, Ixodes spp. ticks, from the Brazilian Pampa. For this, we searched for Ixodes spp. ticks in 307 rodents from 11 municipalities of RS state. We then tested the ticks for the presence of B. burgdorferi s.l. DNA using PCR analysis. Of 35 Ixodes spp. ticks tested, one larva and one nymph of Ixodes longiscutatus ticks tested positive for Borrelia sp. DNA. The phylogenetic analysis of the flaB fragment grouped our samples (referred as Borrelia sp. haplotype Pampa) into B. burgdorferi s.l. group in a particular branch with other South American haplotypes, and this group was close to Borrelia carolinensis , B. bissettiae , and Borrelia californiensis . This is the first evidence of B. burgdorferi s.l. circulation in ticks of the genus Ixodes in Brazil. These results highlight the need for the implementation of public health policies for the diagnosis and prevention of potential cases of human borreliosis in Brazil. Further studies are needed to fill the gaps in our knowledge of the distribution, pathogenicity, reservoirs, and vectors of these emerging South American B. burgdorferi s.l. haplotypes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Serosurvey of Toxoplasma gondii (Eucoccidiorida: Sarcocystidae) in Southern Caracaras (Caracara plancus), Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.
- Author
-
Morel, Ana P., Webster, Anelise, and Reck, José
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Multiple resistance to acaricides in field populations of Rhipicephalus microplus from Rio Grande do Sul state, Southern Brazil.
- Author
-
Klafke, Guilherme, Webster, Anelise, Dall Agnol, Bruno, Pradel, Endrigo, Silva, Jeniffer, de La Canal, Luiz Henrique, Becker, Marcelo, Osório, Mateus Felipe, Mansson, Melanie, Barreto, Rafael, Scheffer, Ramon, Souza, Ugo Araújo, Corassini, Vivian Bamberg, dos Santos, Julsan, Reck, José, and Martins, João Ricardo
- Abstract
Acaricide resistance is a major obstacle to the control of Rhipicephalus microplus . Historically, the indiscriminate use of chemical compounds has contributed to the selection of populations resistant to different classes of acaricides. Therefore, multiple acaricide resistance is an important threat to the chemical control of the cattle tick. To investigate the occurrence and extent of multiple resistance to acaricides in Southern Brazil we performed larval tests with cypermethrin, chlorpyriphos, amitraz, fipronil and ivermectin on 104 cattle tick field samples from different ranches in Rio Grande do Sul, between the years 2013 and 2015. Adult immersion tests with a commercial formulation mixture of chlorpyriphos and cypermethrin were performed on 75 samples. Four levels of resistance were established according to the mortality of larvae: Level I: mortality between 82% and 95%; Level II: mortality between 57% and 82%; Level III: mortality between 25% and 57%; and Level IV: mortality lower than 25%. Resistance to cypermethrin was detected in 98.08% of the samples evaluated, mostly at resistance level IV. The frequency of samples resistant to amitraz, chlorpyriphos, ivermectin and fipronil was 76.92%, 60.58%, 60.58% and 53.85% respectively. Multiple resistance to three or more compounds was found in 78.85% of the samples. The results obtained in this study are alarming and reveal a new scenario for the challenge of tick control using chemicals. This is an issue of high importance to cattle production systems where this tick is responsible for a high economic impact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. First report of fluazuron resistance in Rhipicephalus microplus: A field tick population resistant to six classes of acaricides.
- Author
-
Reck, José, Klafke, Guilherme Marcondes, Webster, Anelise, Dall’Agnol, Bruno, Scheffer, Ramon, Souza, Ugo Araújo, Corassini, Vivian Bamberg, Vargas, Rafael, dos Santos, Julsan Silveira, and de Souza Martins, João Ricardo
- Subjects
- *
RHIPICEPHALUS , *ACARICIDES , *IVERMECTIN , *GROWTH regulators , *PESTICIDES , *CATTLE as carriers of disease - Abstract
Abstract: The control of the cattle tick Rhipicephalus microplus is based mainly on the use of chemical acaricides, which has contributed to the emerging problem of selection of resistant tick populations. Currently, there are six main classes of acaricides commercially available in Brazil to control cattle ticks, with fluazuron, a tick growth regulator with acaricidal properties, being the only active ingredient with no previous reports of resistance. Ticks (designated the Jaguar strain) were collected in a beef cattle ranch located at Rio Grande do Sul state, Southern Brazil, after a complaint of fluazuron treatment failure. To characterise the resistance of this strain against acaricides, larval tests were performed and showed that the Jaguar strain was resistant to all of the drugs tested: cypermethrin (resistance ratio, RR=31.242), chlorpyriphos (RR=103.926), fipronil (RR=4.441), amitraz (RR=11.907) and ivermectin (3.081). A field trial was conducted to evaluate the efficacy of fluazuron treatment in heifers that had been experimentally infested with the Jaguar or a susceptible strain. Between 14 and 28 days after treatment, the average efficacy in cattle experimentally infested with the susceptible strain was 96%, while for the Jaguar strain the efficacy was zero. Additionally, the Jaguar strain response to fluazuron was evaluated in vitro using a modified adult immersion test (AIT) and the artificial feeding assay (AFA). With the AIT, 50ppm of fluazuron inhibited 99% of larvae hatching in the susceptible strain (POA) and less than 50% in the Jaguar strain. Results of the AFA showed a larval hatching rate of 67% at 2.5ppm of fluazuron with the Jaguar strain; conversely, only 3% of larvae of the susceptible strain hatched at the same fluazuron concentration. The results showed here demonstrated the first case of fluazuron resistance in R. microplus and the first tick population resistant to six classes of acaricides in Brazil. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Molecular characterization of bacterial communities of two neotropical tick species (Amblyomma aureolatum and Ornithodoros brasiliensis) using rDNA 16S sequencing.
- Author
-
Dall'Agnol, Bruno, McCulloch, John Anthony, Mayer, Fabiana Quoos, Souza, Ugo, Webster, Anelise, Antunes, Paola, Doyle, Rovaina Laureano, Reck, José, and Ferreira, Carlos Alexandre Sanchez
- Abstract
Ticks are one of the main vectors of pathogens for humans and animals worldwide. However, they harbor non-pathogenic microorganisms that are important for their survival, facilitating both their nutrition and immunity. We investigated the bacterial communities associated with two neotropical tick species of human and veterinary potential health importance from Brazil: Amblyomma aureolatum and Ornithodoros brasiliensis. In A. aureolatum (adult ticks collected from wild canids from Southern Brazil), the predominant bacterial phyla were Proteobacteria (98.68%), Tenericutes (0.70%), Bacteroidetes (0.14%), Actinobacteria (0.13%), and Acidobacteria (0.05%). The predominant genera were Francisella (97.01%), Spiroplasma (0.70%), Wolbachia (0.51%), Candidatus Midichloria (0.25%), and Alkanindiges (0.13%). The predominant phyla in O. brasiliensis (adults, fed and unfed nymphs collected at the environment from Southern Brazil) were Proteobacteria (90.27%), Actinobacteria (7.38%), Firmicutes (0.77%), Bacteroidetes (0.44%), and Planctomycetes (0.22%). The predominant bacterial genera were Coxiella (87.71%), Nocardioides (1.73%), Saccharopolyspora (0.54%), Marmoricola (0.42%), and Staphylococcus (0.40%). Considering the genera with potential importance for human and animal health which can be transmitted by ticks, Coxiella sp. was found in all stages of O. brasiliensis, Francisella sp. in all stages of A. aureolatum and in unfed nymphs of O. brasiliensis, and Rickettsia sp. in females of A. aureolatum from Banhado dos Pachecos (BP) in Viamão municipality, Brazil, and in females and unfed nymphs of O. brasiliensis. These results deepen our understanding of the tick-microbiota relationship in Ixodidae and Argasidae, driving new studies with the focus on the manipulation of tick microbiota to prevent outbreaks of tick-borne diseases in South America. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Natural infection of the wild canid, Cerdocyon thous, with the piroplasmid Rangelia vitalii in Brazil.
- Author
-
Soares, João F., Dall’Agnol, Bruno, Costa, Francisco B., Krawczak, Felipe S., Comerlato, Alexandra T., Rossato, Bruna C.D., Linck, Camila M., Sigahi, Eduardo K.O., Teixeira, Rodrigo H.F., Sonne, Luciana, Hagiwara, Mitika K., Gregori, Fabio, Vieira, Maria Isabel B., Martins, João R., Reck, José, and Labruna, Marcelo B.
- Subjects
- *
CANIDAE , *CERDOCYON thous , *PIROPLASMIDA , *PROTOZOAN diseases , *RIBOSOMAL RNA , *HEMATOLOGY , *DISEASES - Abstract
Abstract: Canine rangeliosis, caused by the piroplasmid protozoon Rangelia vitalii, is currently recognized as a reemerging disease that affects domestic dogs in Brazil. In the present study, piroplasmid infection was searched in wild canids (20 Cerdocyon thous and 4 Lycalopex gymnocercus) in Brazil. Molecular analysis, based on PCR and DNA sequencing of a portion of the 18S rRNA gene, revealed that 30% (6/20) C. thous were infected by R. vitalii. Blood and bone marrow samples from one of the R. vitalii-infected C. thous were inoculated into a domestic dog, which developed clinical rangeliosis that was confirmed by molecular tests. However, the C. thous donor showed no clinical, hematological or biochemical alterations, even though its R. vitalii infection status was confirmed for at least 80 days. These observations suggest that R. vitalii is not as highly pathogenic for C. thous as it is for domestic dogs. Phylogenetic analysis inferred by the 18S rRNA gene placed R. vitalii embedded in the clade ‘Babesia sensu stricto’, consisting of a number of species that represent truly the genus Babesia. It is proposed that the species R. vitalii should be transferred to the genus Babesia. The present study expands our knowledge on the natural history of R. vitalii, suggesting that it might have a natural cycle involving the wild canid C. thous. Further studies are needed to confirm that C. thous is a natural reservoir of R. vitalii in Brazil. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.