Dear Colleagues,

We are pleased to announce publication of the following article:
Lehnert, K., Schwanke, E., Hahn, K., Wohlsein, P., & Siebert, U. (2015). 
Heartworm (Acanthocheilonema spirocauda) and seal louse (Echinophthirius 
horridus) infections in harbour seals (Phoca vitulina) from the North and 
Baltic Seas. Journal of Sea Research.

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1385110115300150

*Abstract*

The seal louse (Echinophthirius [E.] horridus) and the heartworm 
(Acanthocheilonema [A.] spirocauda) are parasites of harbour seal (Phoca 
vitulina). Little is known about the role of the seal louse as a potential 
vector and its role for the development and transmission of heartworm larvae to 
their final host, the harbour seal. The life-cycle of the heartworm is still 
not fully understood. For the presented study, findings of 1191 stranded 
harbour seals collected along the North- and Baltic Sea coast between 1996 and 
2013 were examined. 4.4% (n = 53), of these harbour seals were infected with 
adult heartworms and 3.4% (n = 40) harbour seals carried seal lice. The highest 
prevalence and level of infection with adult heartworms (A. spirocauda) (9.3%) 
and seal lice (E. horridus) (8.9%) were found on yearling harbour seals (7–18 
months) compared to neonate and adult seals. Investigating seal lice (n = 35) 
for larval heartworm stages one larvae was
 encountered in an ethanol-fixated seal louse. During a health monitoring 
survey of live harbour seals, 109 animals were captured and examined during 
spring and autumn between 2008 and 2014. Blood samples were taken and 
microfilariae were discovered in blood smears in 41% (n = 45) of the examined 
harbour seals. Yearling seals (n = 21) showed higher prevalence (86%) and level 
of infection with microfilariae than adults. Microfilariae were identified as 
A. spirocauda by sequencing the species-specific COI gene in 24 blood samples. 
The high prevalence of microfilariae of A. spirocauda in blood samples (41%) is 
in contrast to the low prevalence of mature infections/adult specimens in 
stranded seals (4.4%) investigated. Although rare parasites of seals, the 
recent increase in prevalence of heartworm and seal lice in stranded seals and 
the relatively high occurrence of microfilaria in the free-ranging population 
underscore the importance of further studies
 investigating the immunology of infections and their transmission pathways, as 
well as the epidemiology of both species.

Please contact us if you do not have access to this article and you would like 
a pdf (kristina.lehn...@tiho-hannover.de; eva.schwa...@yahoo.de).


Best regards, 
Eva


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