One to six Sarcocystis spp. were identified in the skeletal muscles of 41 (33%) of 124 wild rodents (Rattus spp. and Bandicota indica) mainly captured in the central plains of Thailand throughout the year in 1995. Included were S. singaporensis, S. villivillosi, and S. murinotechis-like cysts all of which showed a striated cyst wall at the light microscopical level, and Sarcocystis cymruensis, S. sulawesiensis, and S. zamani which possessed smooth cyst walls. The ultrastructure of the cyst wall and other morphological characteristics used to distinguish species are described. By inoculation of muscle cysts from wild-caught rodents into coccidia-free pythons (Python reticulatus, P. molurus bivittatus), we confirmed that P. reticulatus is a suitable definitive host for S. singaporensis and S. zamani in Thailand. Furthermore, we showed by fecal examination of reticulated pythons collected in the wild and subsequent experimental infection of laboratory rats that these hosts also are naturally infected with both species. Sarcocystis cymruensis is reported for the first time from Southeast Asia. This parasite was prevalent in brown rats (Rattus norvegicus) and bandicoot rats (B. indica) which were captured near human habitations; it is likely to be transmitted to rats via cats. The definitive hosts of S. sulawesiensis and S. murinotechis are unknown. Hence, at least three Sarcocystis spp. (S. singaporensis, S. zamani, S. villivillosi) are likely to cycle between snakes and rodents in agricultural areas in Thailand. Among these, S. singaporensis appears to be the most prevalent species.
[1]
T. Jakel,et al.
Sarcocystis singaporensis: studies on host specificity, pathogenicity, and potential use as a biocontrol agent of wild rats.
,
1996,
The Journal of parasitology.
[2]
T. Jäkel.
Cyclic transmission of Sarcocystis gerbilliechis n. sp. by the Arabian saw-scaled viper, Echis coloratus, to rodents of the subfamily gerbillinae.
,
1995,
The Journal of parasitology.
[3]
A. Rabinowitz,et al.
Parasites of Wild Felidae in Thailand: A Coprological Survey
,
1994,
Journal of wildlife diseases.
[4]
W. Lamar,et al.
The Snakes of Thailand and Their Husbandry
,
1992
.
[5]
W. Frank,et al.
Host specificity and host range of the genus Sarcocystis in three snake-rodent life cycles.
,
1984,
Zentralblatt fur Bakteriologie, Mikrobiologie, und Hygiene. Series A, Medical microbiology, infectious diseases, virology, parasitology.
[6]
R. W. Mason,et al.
Sarcocystis AND RELATED ORGANISMS IN AUSTRALIAN WILDLIFE: I. SURVEY FINDINGS IN MAMMALS.
,
1978,
Journal of wildlife diseases.
[7]
J. K. Frenkel,et al.
Ultrastructure of the cyst of Sarcocystis muris.
,
1977,
The Journal of parasitology.
[8]
B. Rj,et al.
Sarcocystis from rats in Sulawesi, Indonesia.
,
1974
.
[9]
Schaeffer Bt,et al.
Sarcocystis in the Philippines: a histologic review of 202 cases in rats.
,
1972
.