Environmental Contamination by Parasites in Public Parks in Belgrade in the Context of One Health Approach

IF 0.7 4区 农林科学 Q3 VETERINARY SCIENCES
D. Bogunović, Nina Dominiković, Nemanja M. Jovanović, K. Nenadović, Z. Kulišić, T. Ilić, N. Stevic
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract This paper studies the presence of developmental forms of gastrointestinal parasites in soil and sand samples, as well as in dog feces collected from public green spaces in Belgrade. The paper incorporates the spread analysis of contamination over different segments of parks. Four public green spaces in Belgrade were chosen, all containing an open-spaced children’s playground and a fenced dog park. Sample analysis of soil/sand was examined using qualitative methods without concentration (native slide) and with concentration (passive sedimentation and gravitational centrifugal flotation). In total, 106 samples have been collected out of which 60 samples of soil, 36 of dog faeces and ten samples of sand. Seven different agents have been detected, out of which five nematodes - Ancylostoma/Uncinaria spp., Trichuris spp., Capillaria spp., Toxocara spp., Toxascaris leonina and two protozoa - Isospora spp. and Giardia intestinalis. The overall prevalence of contamination of soil samples was 31.67% and a statistically significant difference in the prevalence of ancylostoma eggs was found between different locations. The most common agent detected in the dog’s faeces was Isospora spp., with a prevalence of 5.56%, followed by Giardia intestinalis and ancylostomatids with a prevalence of 2.78% each. The sand samples had no parasitic elements found. The contamination by parasites and by dogs’ faeces was equally dispersed in all segments of the examined locations. There is a great need to raise public awareness on the issue, and by the joint action of veterinarians, medical doctors, pet owners and people using public parks for recreation - a precondition is created for the sustainability of the “One Health” concept which implies the preservation of the environment and human and animal health.
从一种健康方法看贝尔格莱德公共公园寄生虫对环境的污染
摘要:本文研究了在贝尔格莱德公共绿地采集的土壤、沙样和狗粪中胃肠道寄生虫的发育形式。本文结合了污染在公园不同路段的扩散分析。贝尔格莱德的四个公共绿地被选中,都包含一个开放空间的儿童游乐场和一个围栏狗公园。采用无浓缩(原生滑动)和有浓缩(被动沉降和重力离心浮选)两种定性方法对土/砂样品进行分析。总共收集了106个样本,其中60个土壤样本,36个狗粪便样本和10个沙子样本。共检出7种病原,其中线虫5种(钩虫/钩虫、毛线虫、毛线虫、弓形虫、狮子弓形虫)和原虫2种(等孢子虫和肠贾第虫)。土壤样品总体污染率为31.67%,不同地区钩虫卵患病率差异有统计学意义。犬粪便中检出最多的病原是异孢子虫,检出率为5.56%,其次是肠贾第虫和钩虫,检出率均为2.78%。沙样中未发现寄生元素。寄生虫和狗粪的污染均匀分布在所有检查地点。非常有必要提高公众对这一问题的认识,并通过兽医、医生、宠物主人和利用公园进行娱乐的人们的联合行动,为"同一个健康"概念的可持续性创造一个先决条件,这意味着保护环境以及人类和动物的健康。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Acta Veterinaria-Beograd
Acta Veterinaria-Beograd 农林科学-兽医学
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
16.70%
发文量
33
审稿时长
18-36 weeks
期刊介绍: The Acta Veterinaria is an open access, peer-reviewed scientific journal of the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Belgrade, Serbia, dedicated to the publication of original research articles, invited review articles, and to limited extent methodology articles and case reports. The journal considers articles on all aspects of veterinary science and medicine, including the diagnosis, prevention and treatment of medical conditions of domestic, companion, farm and wild animals, as well as the biomedical processes that underlie their health.
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