Introduction
Acanthocephala currently comprises about 1,298 described species (Amin Reference Amin2013). These organisms make up one of the four subclasses of the phylum Rotifera (Nielsen Reference Nielsen2012; Brusca et al. Reference Brusca, Moore and Shuster2018) and are obligate intestinal vertebrate parasites with no free-living members (Kennedy Reference Kennedy2006). In the adult stage, Acanthocephala bodies are cylindrical or slightly flattened, with retractable proboscises (cylindrical and with curved hooks) that are ideal for anchoring the parasite to the host’s intestinal wall. Many species have rings of spines along their bodies (Nielsen Reference Nielsen2012).
The life cycle and developmental stages of these parasites are remarkably similar across species, comprising the egg stage (containing a larva, the acanthor); the larval stages of acanthella and cystacanth in an intermediate arthropod host; and finally, the adult stage in a definitive vertebrate host (Kennedy Reference Kennedy2006; Near Reference Near2002). At times, the acanthocephalan life cycle of some species may utilise paratenic or transport hosts (Near Reference Near2002). Proportionally, birds and fish are the most widely used definitive hosts, followed by mammals. In turn, amphibians and reptiles are less commonly used. As for habitat, acanthocephalans are predominantly aquatic parasites and are frequently found in freshwater vertebrates (Kennedy Reference Kennedy2006). In the context of the life cycle, Perrot-Minnot et al. (Reference Perrot-Minnot, Cozzarolo, Amin, Barčák, Bauer, Marijić and Sures2023) point out the need to expand and disseminate knowledge on the range of hosts used by each acanthocephalan species. In the case of acanthocephalans, the degree of specificity varies between intermediate, paratenic, and definitive hosts and constitutes a crucial factor for the distribution and abundance of the parasite (Kennedy Reference Kennedy2006).
Acanthocephalans comprise part of a model parasite–host system that requires studies on their life cycles, their transmission strategies, and their host exploitation, as well as factors that contribute to host specialisation (Perrot-Minnot et al. Reference Perrot-Minnot, Cozzarolo, Amin, Barčák, Bauer, Marijić and Sures2023). Due to the small number of described acanthocephalan species, they have received less attention compared to other groups of endoparasitic metazoans. Nonetheless, it is still considered a successful group, as they infect all vertebrate taxa and are found in all biomes and ecosystems (Kennedy Reference Kennedy2006). In a survey of anuran endoparasites in South America by Campião et al. (Reference Campião, Morais, Dias, Aguiar, Toledo, Tavares and Silva2014a), acanthocephalans were found to be relatively rare, with 15 registered taxa, infecting 39 species of anurans. For comparison purposes, nematodes reached 150 registered taxa.
Amphibians are hosts to a rich diversity of associated parasites and can be infected at any time between the larval and adult stages (Bower et al. Reference Bower, Brannelly, McDonald, Webb, Greenspan, Vickers, Gardner and Greenlees2019; Duellman and Trueb Reference Duellman and Trueb1994). Approximately 88 species of brazilian amphibians (mostly anurans) had records of infection by helminths, including acanthocephalans (Campião et al. Reference Campião, Morais, Dias, Aguiar, Toledo, Tavares and Silva2014a). In most anuran taxa studied, acanthocephalans are completely absent, or, when present, they are not the most prevalent or abundant parasites nor do they infect the widest range of host species (Aguiar et al. Reference Aguiar, Morais, Cicchi and Silva2014; Bursey et al. Reference Bursey, Goldberg and Parmelee2001; Santos et al. Reference Santos, Amato and Borges-Martins2013; Toledo et al. Reference Toledo, Aguiar, Silva and Anjos2013; Toledo et al. Reference Toledo, Fonseca, Iannacone, Cardenas Callirgos, Pineda Castillo and da Silva2017). In contrast, a study by Martins-Sobrinho (Reference Martins-Sobrinho, WGdO, EGd, GJBd and JBd2017) was one of the few that recorded acanthocephalans as the most abundant and prevalent endoparasites in anurans of the families Hylidae and Phylomedusidae. However, possible explanations for this finding are not discussed.
The total of 209 anuran species are found in the Cerrado biome, with a high level of endemism (51.7%) (Valdujo et al. Reference Valdujo, Silvano, Colli and Martins2012). In the Cerrado in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul, two anuran species were reported as being infected by unidentified acanthocephalans (Queiroz et al. Reference Queiroz, Pontes, Neto, Campião and Anjos2020). In the transition between the Cerrado and Atlantic Forest in the state of São Paulo, Aguiar (Reference Aguiar, Morais, Silva, Dos Anjos, Foster and Silva2021) found the infection of 13 anuran species by unidentified cystacanths and acanthocephalans of the Centrorhynchidae family. Thus, the present study aims to characterise the acanthocephalan fauna associated with ten anuran species from a Cerrado fragment in Northeastern Brazil, seeking to geographically expand the knowledge on anuran acanthocephalan fauna in the country. In addition, we present their levels of specificity. With the aim of contributing to knowledge about the geographic distribution of anuran acanthocephalans in South America, we also present the locality records for each species, considering that new publications with records of acanthocephalan infections in anurans from South America have been recorded after the last survey carried out by Campião et al. (Reference Campião, Morais, Dias, Aguiar, Toledo, Tavares and Silva2014a).
Materials and methods
Study area
Host collection was conducted in the Itamacaoca Protection Reserve – IPR (3°44′55″S 43°19′58″W; datum WGS84), a Cerrado area located in the Chapadinha municipality, Maranhão state, Northeastern Brazil (Figure 1). This reserve covers approximately 460ha and contains the Itamacaoca Dam, the main source of drinking water for the urban region of the municipality of Chapadinha (Silva et al. Reference Silva, Martins, Santos, JLS, Selbach and Leite2008). The Reserve is composed of a mosaic of vegetation, with riparian forests, gallery forests, cerrado fields, and relicts of Cerradão. However, due to the advance of the agricultural frontier in this municipality, the region has experienced habitat loss and fragmentation (Silva et al. Reference Silva, Martins, Santos, JLS, Selbach and Leite2008). The climate is tropical, with an average annual temperature of 27.6 °C and an average annual rainfall volume of 1452 mm. The rainy season runs from December to May and the dry season from June to November (Climate-Data 2021).
Data collection
Animal collections were carried out during the rainy season between January and March 2020, from 6:00 p.m to 10:00 p.m. Nine active searches were carried out, totaling 36 hours of fieldwork. Searches were carried out by a minimum of two and a maximum of four people. Specimens were actively sought in the soil, at the edges of water bodies, and in the surrounding vegetation. After being manually collected, anurans were immediately stored in plastic bags filled with a small volume of water or in damp cloth bags. They were then transported to the herpetology laboratory at the Chapadinha Science Center of the Universidade Federal do Maranhão, where they were euthanised using a lethal dose (60 to 100 mg/kg) of Thiopental, administered intraperitoneally. Following euthanasia, the animals were tagged, identified, and weighed, and their snout-vent length was measured. Sex was determined by analysing the gonads during dissection. The taxonomic classification of hosts is in accordance with Frost (Reference Frost2021).
The anurans were dissected, and the lungs and gastrointestinal tract were analysed under a stereomicroscope. When present, acanthocephalans were counted and stored in vials with 70% alcohol. Subsequently, they were temporarily mounted on slides containing glycerol (McAllister and Bursey Reference McAllister and Bursey2007), analysed under a light microscope, and identified to the lowest possible taxonomic level according to McDonald (Reference McDonald1988), Van Cleave (Reference Van Cleave1923), Smales (Reference Smales2007a), Santos & Amato (Reference Santos and Amato2010a), and Palmer et al. (Reference Palmer, Dib, Lobão, Pinheiro, Ramos, Uchoa, Bastos, Silva, do Nascimento and Pissinatti2020). The hosts were fixed in a 10% formalin solution, stored in bottles with 70% alcohol, and deposited in the Claude d’Abbeville Herpetological Collection at the Chapadinha Science Center of the Universidade Federal do Maranhão, Brazil.
Ethical aspects
The collection and use of amphibians in the present study was authorised by the Instituto Chico Mendes de Biodiversidade (ICMBio/SISBIO - authorisation number: 71407-1, 71407-2) and the Commission for Ethics in the Use of Animals of the Universidade Federal do Maranhão (CEUA- UFMA - process no. 23115.031592/2019-38).
Quantitative descriptors
Prevalence and mean intensity of infection were calculated according to Bush (Reference Bush, Lafferty, Lotz and Shostak1997). Prevalence is the ratio between the number of hosts infected by a given species and the total number of hosts collected, multiplied by 100. Mean intensity is calculated by the total number of parasites of a species divided by the total number of hosts parasitised by that species. Both descriptors were calculated for each anuran species.
Host specificity
In order to determine the specificity of each acanthocephalans species to their hosts, the specificity index STD * (Poulin and Mouillot Reference Poulin and Mouillot2005) was calculated using the following equation:
where ωij is the taxonomic distinction between host species i and j, and pi and pj represent parasite prevalence in host species i and j. The index was calculated in the TaxoBiodiv2 program (Poulin and Mouillot Reference Poulin and Mouillot2005) only for acanthocephalans identified down to the genus level. The closer the index value converges to 1, the more specific the parasite. The maximum value is 5, when using five taxonomic levels and when all host species belong to different classes (Poulin and Mouillot Reference Poulin and Mouillot2005).
Bibliographic survey
Acanthocephalan records were verified in the following scientific bases: PubMed, Google Scholar, and Scielo. We only included studies where parasites were identified to at least the genus level and where the geographic coordinates or name of the host collection site were described in our analyses. The time range of publications was 1990–present. The following keywords were used in our research: “anuran acanthocephalans in South America”; “anuran acanthocephalans followed by the name of each country in South America”. Information on the species sampled in the present study was also included.
Results
Our anuran sampling in the IPR resulted in the capture of 175 anuran specimens, belonging to ten species and three families (Table 1). We recorded an overall prevalence of 32.6% (57 anurans infected by 437 specimens of acanthocephalans). Two taxa were identified in the cystacanth stage: Centrorhynchus sp., with 148 specimens being found to infect six species of anurans, and Oncicola sp., where three specimens were found in one species of anuran (Table 1). The former presents a receptacle for the proboscis and is positioned in the middle part of the proboscis section located behind simple, spine-like thorns. In front of this insertion point, there are sturdy hooks that curve backward. The second is characterised by having cement glands that are nearly round in shape (Van Cleave Reference Van Cleave1923). The lemnisci are extremely elongated, resembling sub-cylinders, and they occupy over three-fourths of the body cavity’s length (Van Cleave Reference Van Cleave1923). Furthermore, 286 acanthocephalans cystacanths (that presented the same morphotype) found in nine species could not be identified due to a lack of clear visualisation of taxonomic characters.
Note: means appear as ± 1 SD; * new registered host.
Unidentified acanthocephalans had a higher prevalence in L. vastus (53.85%) and a lower prevalence in L. pustulatus (12.5%). The highest intensity was in L. pustulatus (17±16) and the lowest in E. piauiensis (1). The highest prevalence of Centrorhynchus sp. was in the species S. fuscomarginatus (28.57%) and the lowest in L. macrosternum (4%). The species Oncicola sp. had maximum specificity (S TD*= 1), whereas Centrorhynchus sp. was less specific (S TD*= 2.21).
From the bibliographic survey, we found 31 eligible scientific articles according to our inclusion criteria, and after analysing this bibliography, we found ten records of acanthocephalan taxa parasitising 58 species of anurans in seven South American countries (Table 2; Figure 2). We observed that few locations on the continent have been sampled, and six countries still have no records of identified acanthocephalans in amphibians. Of the countries with records, Brazil was the most sampled, followed by Paraguay, Ecuador, Colombia, Chile, Peru, and Argentina. Centrorhynchus sp. is the most widely distributed taxon, spanning across Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Paraguay, Colombia, and Peru.
Discussion
Our study provides the first record of acanthocephalans of the genus Oncicola in anurans of the genus Scinax and anurans of the family Hylidae. The genus Oncicola comprises 24 species and uses carnivorous mammals as definitive hosts (Amin Reference Amin2013). It is rarely recorded in anurans, despite being highlighted as potential paratenic hosts (Goldberg et al. Reference Goldberg, Bursey, Salgado-Maldonado, Báez and Cañeda2002). In amphibians, the genus Oncicola has already been recorded in Colombia in Oophaga histrionica (Dendrobatidae) (Goldberg and Bursey Reference Goldberg and Bursey2003) and Mexico in Lithobates brownorum (Ranidae) (Velazquez-Urrieta and León-Règagnon Reference Velazquez-Urrieta and León-Règagnon2018), L. vaillanti (Ranidae) (Paredes-Calderón et al. Reference Paredes-Calderón, León-Règagnon and García-Prieto2004), and L. forreri (Ranidae) (Cabrera-Guzmán et al. Reference Cabrera-Guzmán, Garrido-Olvera and León-Règagnon2010). Our record expands the knowledge of helminth infection to include amphibian fauna in Brazil and more specifically in the northeastern Cerrado.
Anurans are considered definitive hosts of acanthocephalans (Richardson Reference Richardson2013), but some species have been recorded as paratenic hosts (Santos and Amato Reference Santos and Amato2010b; Schmidt Reference Schmidt, Crompton and Nickol1985). The genus Centrorhynchus is an example of an acanthocephalan that uses amphibians to reach its definitive hosts (birds and terrestrial predators) (Hernandez-Orts et al. Reference Hernandez-Orts, Kuchta, Semenas, Crespo, Gonzalez and Aznar2019; Kennedy Reference Kennedy2006; Santos and Amato Reference Santos and Amato2010b). The taxon comprises 100 species (Amin Reference Amin2013) and is one of the most frequently recorded acanthocephalan genera in South American anurans, distributed across Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay, Colombia, and Peru (Torres and Puga Reference Torres and Puga1996; Goldberg and Bursey Reference Goldberg and Bursey2003; Campião et al. Reference Campião, Morais, Dias, Aguiar, Toledo, Tavares and Silva2014a; Martins-Sobrinho et al. Reference Martins-Sobrinho, WGdO, EGd, GJBd and JBd2017; Oliveira et al. Reference Oliveira, Ávila and Morais2019; Oliveira et al. Reference Oliveira, Mascarenhas, Batista-Oliveira, de Castro Araújo, Ávila and Borges-Nojosa2022). In Brazil, it has already been recorded in the Atlantic Forest (Graça et al. Reference Graça, Oda, Lima, Guerra, Gambale and Takemoto2017; Martins-Sobrinho et al. Reference Martins-Sobrinho, WGdO, EGd, GJBd and JBd2017) and Caatinga (Oliveira et al. Reference Oliveira, Mascarenhas, Batista-Oliveira, de Castro Araújo, Ávila and Borges-Nojosa2022). Santos (Reference Santos and Amato2010a) categorised the anuran Rhinella fernandezae as a paratenic host of Centrorhynchus sp., which suggests, in the present study, that the five species of anurans infected by this taxon are paratenic hosts. Although paratenic hosts are not obligatory for the physiological development of acanthocephalans, they may serve as a trophic level in these parasites’ life cycles (Richardson Reference Richardson2013), providing protection during this period against the external environment in addition to more effectively directing the parasite to its definitive host (Parker et al. Reference Parker, Chubb, Ball and Roberts2003).
Despite being a small group that presents a low diversity of larval stages and life cycles, acanthocephalans are well distributed, both spatially and among hosts, even when compared to other larger and more diverse parasite groups, such as nematodes (Kennedy Reference Kennedy2006). Contrary to the present study, in most surveys of anuran populations, these parasites are not usually representative (Aguiar et al. Reference Aguiar, Morais, Cicchi and Silva2014; Bursey et al. Reference Bursey, Goldberg and Parmelee2001; Santos et al. Reference Santos, Amato and Borges-Martins2013; Toledo et al. Reference Toledo, Aguiar, Silva and Anjos2013; Toledo et al. Reference Toledo, Fonseca, Iannacone, Cardenas Callirgos, Pineda Castillo and da Silva2017). One exception to this is a study by Martins-Sobrinho et al. (Reference Martins-Sobrinho, WGdO, EGd, GJBd and JBd2017), who found acanthocephalans in all nine anuran species analysed in the Atlantic Forest that were even more prevalent than nematodes. The species Centrorhynchus sp. in the species S. x-signatus, for example, had a prevalence of 45% and a mean intensity of 5.4±7.7. However, in the present study, its prevalence was 16.13% and the mean intensity was 3.40±1.36 in the same anuran species. Santos and Amato (Reference Santos and Amato2010b) found Centrorhynchus sp. in 84% of Rhinella fernandezae individuals in Rio Grande do Sul state. Silveira et al. (Reference Silveira, Mascarenhas, Huckembeck, Müller and Loebmann2022) found Centrorhynchus sp. in 59% of Boana pulchella hosts, also in Rio Grande do Sul State.
According to Janovy et al. (Reference Janovy, Clopton and Percival1992), ecological factors are the main determinants of parasite population structure. For example, in a study carried out on a population of anurans of the species Physalaemus cuvieri in the Atlantic Forest, Leivas et al. (Reference Leivas, Leivas and Campião2018) found that acanthocephalans had higher infection rates than nematode species, mainly cystacanths from the Centrorhynchidae family, with a prevalence of 42.8% and an average intensity of 2.8 ± 1.7. In this study, the host’s diet was attributed to the high prevalence of acanthocephalans found by Leivas et al. (Reference Leivas, Leivas and Campião2018). In fact, host feeding habits are determinant for acanthocephalan infection (Kennedy Reference Kennedy2006) since these parasites have a heteroxene life cycle, in which arthropods are the intermediate hosts (Kennedy Reference Kennedy2006; Santos and Amato Reference Santos and Amato2010b). As such, we can assume that the rarity of acanthocephalans frequently reported in studies is attributed to the absence or lower abundance of suitable intermediate hosts, preventing successful infection (Kennedy Reference Kennedy2006; Campião et al. Reference Campião, Silva and Ferreira2014b).
Although our small sample size did not allow for a detailed analysis of the environmental influence on the dynamics of acanthocephalans and their hosts, it seems that each biome can impose an environmental dynamic of biotic and abiotic factors that interferes with the prevalence and intensity of different parasite taxa. The work of Thieltges et al. (Reference Thieltges, Jensen and Poulin2008) provides a broad review of several abiotic factors that affect metazoan infection rates such as temperature, salinity, PH, UV-radiation, hardness, and pollutants, as well biotic factors such as hyperparasites, physical disturbance by organisms, toxic exudates from organisms, decoy organisms, predation, and alternative hosts. For example, during the egg stage of acanthocephalans, transmission success is influenced by environmental factors that increase or decrease the pool of infectious stages and infection rates (Thieltges et al. Reference Thieltges, Jensen and Poulin2008).
In natural environments, some organisms can ingest or filter certain species of parasites without serving as intermediate or definitive hosts and thus control parasite abundance in the environment. Therefore, it is expected that fluctuations in the population sizes of these filter-feeding/ingesting species will directly influence the increase or decrease in parasitism rates (Thieltges et al. Reference Thieltges, Jensen and Poulin2008). Additionally, amphibian populations also experience fluctuations in terms of size due to their dependence on bodies of water for reproduction. In rainy years, survival and population growth are high, but in dry years, reproduction rates can drop, preventing population growth (Pough et al. Reference Pough, Bemis, McGuire and Janis2023). Therefore, the patterns of acanthocephala infection recorded in our study may reflect some of the scenarios that exist in this range of recruitment method, normally observed in anurans. However, only long-term sequence sampling will be able to clarify this trend.
In addition, anuran biology and transmission dynamics work in conjunction with abiotic factors in the parasite community at each location (McAlpine Reference McAlpine1997). Therefore, the structure of the acanthocephalan community in the anurans of the present study probably results from the joint action of these factors, although it is not possible to separate the relative importance of each of them.
When considering biotic and abiotic factors, we must also consider anthropogenic impacts on parasite transmission dynamics (Thieltges et al. Reference Thieltges, Jensen and Poulin2008), such as habitat fragmentation and degradation, to which gastrointestinal parasites are vulnerable (Kiene et al. Reference Kiene, Andriatsitohaina, Ramsay, Rakotondravony, Strube and Radespiel2021). The Itamacaoca Reserve (i.e., the study collection site) suffers from fragmentation and loss of vegetation cover (Silva et al. 2008). This fragmentation can alter host density (due to the reduced size of the habitat), which can affect parasite diversity (Chakraborty et al. Reference Chakraborty, Reddy, Tiwari and Umapathy2019), since infection rates can be mediated by the abundance of intermediate hosts in the environment and host accessibility to parasites (which is generally related to host abundance) (Kiene et al. Reference Kiene, Andriatsitohaina, Ramsay, Rakotondravony, Strube and Radespiel2021). Therefore, the chances of contact between intermediate and final hosts, and between hosts and parasites, may be greater in fragmented areas, favoring transmission and possibly generating changes in the infection rates found in this study.
Janovy et al. (Reference Janovy, Clopton and Percival1992) state that the presence of a parasitic species in a host species is strongly influenced by evolutionary factors. However, the infection data obtained in the present study suggest an ecological influence on the observed infection pattern, corroborating the studies by Sampaio et al. (Reference Sampaio, Teixeira, Do Nascimento, Ribeiro, Almeida and Brito2022) and Oliveira et al. (Reference Oliveira, Sousa, Carvalho, Ávila and DM2023). In the case of acanthocephalans, hosts from a given locality are probably more related ecologically due to similarities in diet and habitat than phylogenetically (McAlpine Reference McAlpine1997; Kennedy Reference Kennedy2006), which should explain the presence of Centrorhynchus sp. and Oncicola sp. in the anuran hosts of the present study.
The species Oncicola sp. was the only acanthocephalan associated with a single host species, with maximum specificity. A high degree of specialisation indicates a low chance of survival in a location if the host population becomes extinct (Kennedy Reference Kennedy2006). However, Combes (Reference Combes2001) states that to ensure the continuity of the cycle, highly specific parasites must occur in stable environments and in continuous and abundant host populations. Furthermore, anurans likely serve as paratenic hosts for Oncicola sp. (Goldberg et al. Reference Goldberg, Bursey, Salgado-Maldonado, Báez and Cañeda2002), which perhaps explains the fact that it was only found in one species. However, less specific helminths, such as Centrorhynchus sp., probably cope better with local extinctions and fluctuations in the host population (Poulin et al. Reference Poulin, Krasnov, Mouillot and Thieltges2011).
In South America, there are records of acanthocephalans in Peru (Bursey et al. Reference Bursey, Goldberg and Parmelee2001; Chero et al. Reference Chero, Cruces, Iannacone, Sáez, Alvariño, da Silva and Morales2014), Chile (Fernandez and Ibarra Reference Fernandez and Ibarra1990), Argentina (Arredondo and de Pertierra Reference Arredondo and de Pertierra2009; Gonzalez and Hamann Reference Gonzalez and Hamann2006; Hamann et al. Reference Hamann, González and Kehr2006), Colombia (Goldberg and Bursey Reference Goldberg and Bursey2003), Paraguay (Smales Reference Smales2007a), Ecuador (Smales Reference Smales2007b), and Brazil, with distributions in the Atlantic Forest (Aguiar et al. Reference Aguiar, Morais, Cicchi and Silva2014; Graça et al. Reference Graça, Oda, Lima, Guerra, Gambale and Takemoto2017; Martins-Sobrinho et al. Reference Martins-Sobrinho, WGdO, EGd, GJBd and JBd2017; Toledo et al. Reference Toledo, Aguiar, Silva and Anjos2013), Cerrado (Aguiar et al. Reference Aguiar, Morais, Silva, Dos Anjos, Foster and Silva2021; Queiroz et al. Reference Queiroz, Pontes, Neto, Campião and Anjos2020), Caatinga (Oliveira et al. Reference Oliveira, Ávila and Morais2019; Oliveira et al. Reference Oliveira, Mascarenhas, Batista-Oliveira, de Castro Araújo, Ávila and Borges-Nojosa2022; Silva-Neta et al. Reference Silva-Neta, Alcantara, Oliveira, Carvalho, Morais, Silva and Ávila2020), and Pantanal (Campião et al. Reference Campião, da Silva, Dalazen, Paiva and Tavares2016; Campião et al. Reference Campião, Silva and Ferreira2014b) biomes. Although Brazil’s ecosystems remain insufficiently explored, they boast the highest diversity of acanthocephalans on the continent. Nonetheless, South America still remains undersampled, with five countries still lacking studies on this topic. Our survey highlights the need for further studies in this regard, seeking to understand patterns of infection by acanthocephalans.
We emphasise that new studies have been published following the checklist of parasitic helminths in anurans from South America, carried out by Campião et al. (Reference Campião, Morais, Dias, Aguiar, Toledo, Tavares and Silva2014a) between 1925 and 2012. Thus, our study aims to contribute to the aforementioned survey, focusing on the geographic distribution of known acanthocephalans. However, there are still significant gaps in sampling, which shows that the true extent of the diversity and distribution of these organisms is far from being fully understood due to the limited data collection to date.
In summary, our study provides valuable information about the distribution of acanthocephalans in South American anurans, particularly in northeastern Brazil. Furthermore, our findings highlight the structural role of ecological and environmental factors, including host diet habits, on infection rates. Therefore, considering these factors, along with potential human impacts, a comprehensive investigation into infection patterns observed in this acanthocephalan population is essential.
Acknowledgements
We thank the Conselho Nacional de Pesquisa e Apoio ao Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) and the Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa e ao Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico do Maranhão (FAPEMA) for a research fellowship to Adonias Aphoena Martins Teixeira (PDCTR/FAPEMA/CNPq 301692/2021-2). This study was partially financed by the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior – Brasil (CAPES) – Finance code 001. The authors also thank the Instituto Chico Mendes de Conservação da Biodiversidade (ICMBio - ICMBio/SISBIO - 71407-1 and 71407-2) for the license for anuran capture and the ethics committee of the Universidade Federal do Maranhão (CEUA-UFMA - 23115.031592/2019-38) for approving this study.
Competing interest
None.
Ethical standard
All authors gave their consent to participation in the study. The study was approved by the Instituto Chico Mendes de Conservação da Biodiversidade, with permission to collect the animals, and the ethics committee of the Universidade Federal do Maranão.