
Rachel Pool- University of Valencia
Rachel Pool
- University of Valencia
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14
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Introduction
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Publications
Publications (14)
Copepods of the genus Pennella parasitize a wide range of marine animals, including cetaceans, teleosts, and cephalopods worldwide. Their taxonomy is unclear, as there is incongruence between morphological and genetic data and incomplete species coverage. This study provides new morphological and genetic (COI) data from 23 specimens of Pennella cf....
In the Northeast Atlantic, it is unclear whether short‐finned pilot whales, Globicephala macrorhynchus (SFPWs), are transient or resident above 40°N. We used Anisakis spp. to identify the latitudes recently visited by a SFPW pod stranded in NW Spain (43°N) in 2020. Analysis of cox2 gene in 30 nematodes from 6 SFPWs revealed the presence of A. simpl...
In the Northeast Atlantic, it is unclear whether short-finned pilot whales, Globicephala macrorhynchus (SFPWs), are transient or resident above 40ºN. We used Anisakis spp. to identify the latitudes recently visited by a SFPW pod stranded in NW Spain (43ºN) in 2020. Analysis of cox2 gene in 30 nematodes from 6 SFPWs revealed the presence of A. simpl...
Despite their high pathogenicity, limited knowledge is available on intrahost migration pathways and microhabitat distribution of pseudaliid lungworms. In this study, the distribution of Halocercus delphini in the lungs of the striped dolphin, Stenella coeruleoalba, was analyzed on three scales: between the right and left lungs, within the lungs, a...
Dolphins are marine mammals that often live in coastal habitats. Common causes of severe skeletal disorders among wild dolphins are congenital vertebral anomalities, collisions with sea vessels, trauma, hunting-related injury, infectious diseases, environmental pollution, and tumors. A free-ranging male, 3-year-old common dolphin (Delphinus delphis...
Metastrongyloid lungworms from the family Pseudaliidae infect the lungs and cranial sinuses of cetaceans worldwide, except Stenuroides herpestis, which exhibits a striking terrestrial association with the Egyptian mongoose, Herpestes ichneumon. Previous phylogenies of the Metastrongyloidea that included some (2-7) marine species of the Pseudaliidae...
Background
Current data about Pseudaliidae show contrasting patterns of host specificity between congeneric species. We investigated how both contact and compatibility between hosts and parasites contributed to the patterns of lungworm infection observed in a community of five species of cetaceans in the western Mediterranean.
Methods
The lungs of...
Within the cetacean lungworm family Pseudaliidae Raillet & Henry, 1909, the distinction between the two genera of the subfamily Halocercinae Delamure, 1952, i.e. Halocercus Baylis & Daubney, 1925 and Skrjabinalius Delyamure, 1942, is principally based on the structure and shape of the male copulatory bursa. In species of Halocercus, the bursa is un...
Species of Anisakis typically infect the stomach of cetaceans worldwide, often causing ulcerative lesions that may compromise the host's health. These nematodes also cause anisakiasis or allergic reactions in humans. To assess the risks of this emerging zoonosis, data on long-term changes in Anisakis infections in cetaceans are necessary. Here, we...
Pseudaliid lungworms infect the lungs and sinuses of cetaceans. Information on the life cycle and epidemiology of pseudaliids is very scarce and mostly concerns species that infect coastal or inshore cetaceans. Available evidence indicates that some pseudaliids are vertically transmitted to the host, whereas others are acquired via infected prey. W...