Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2055295 International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife 2013 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Baylisascaris procyonis has many of the properties associated with a pathogen capable of facilitating extinction.•Baylisascaris procyonis is highly non-specific with regard to paratenic hosts.•Eggs of B. procyonis accumulate with feces at raccoon latrines, and can remain viable for many years.•Transmission of B. procyonis occurs at raccoon latrines, and is sensitive to changes in land-use.•Conservation strategies for vulnerable species should consider the transmission ecology of parasitic pathogens, like B. procyonis.

Human demands on natural resources result in landscape changes that facilitate the emergence of disease. Most emerging diseases are zoonotic, and some of these pathogens play a role in the decline of vulnerable wildlife species. Baylisascaris procyonis, the common roundworm parasite of raccoons (Procyon lotor), is a well recognized zoonotic infection that has many of the properties associated with a pathogen capable of driving extinction. It is highly non-specific and frequently pathogenic with regard to paratenic hosts, which contact eggs of B. procyonis at raccoon latrines. Eggs accumulate at latrines and remain viable for many years. Transmission of B. procyonis is sensitive to changes in land-use, and fragmented habitats increase contact rates between raccoons, potential paratenic hosts, and the parasite. Raccoons, and subsequently B. procyonis, have been introduced to Europe and Japan, where naïve vertebrates may be exposed to the parasite. Finally, domestic animals and exotic pets can carry patent infections with B. procyonis, thus increasing environmental contamination beyond raccoon latrines, and expanding the area of risk to potential paratenic hosts. This parasite can potentially contribute to extinctions of vulnerable species, as exemplified by the case of the Allegheny woodrat (Neotoma magister), a species that has experienced local declines and extinctions that are linked to B. procyonis. Conservation strategies for vulnerable species should consider the transmission ecology of parasitic pathogens, like B. procyonis.

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