Dear MARMAM community:

My co-authors and I are very pleased to announce the publication of our new 
paper: "Specificity of Stenurus (Metastrongyloidea: Pseudaliidae) infections in 
odontocetes stranded along the north-west Spanish coast".

We hope it'll be interesting for any other parasite enthusiast out there!

Abstract: Parasites extracted from the lungs and the pterygoid sinus complex of 
6 species of odontocetes stranded along the north-west Spanish coast (Northeast 
Atlantic) between 2009 and 2019 were morphologically identified. The samples 
belonged to 14 specimens, including 3 harbour porpoises, Phocoena phocoena, 6 
short-finned pilot whales, Globicephala macrorhynchus, 1 long-finned pilot 
whale, Globicephala melas, 1 Risso’s dolphin, Grampus griseus, 1 striped 
dolphin, Stenella coeruleoalba and 2 bottlenose dolphins, Tursiops truncatus. 
All animals (14/14) were infected by nematodes of the genus Stenurus spp.; 
moreover, two of them presented a mixed lung nematode infection by Stenurus 
spp. and Halocercus spp., and another two a mixed infection by Stenurus spp. 
and the trematode Nasitrema spp. in the pterygoid sinuses. The morphological 
characterization of the Stenurus specimens revealed the existence of three 
different species: Stenurus minor, present in the pterygoid sinuses of harbour 
porpoises with a mean intensity of 43.0 ± 9.0; Stenurus globicephalae, in the 
pterygoid sinuses of pilot whales and the Risso’s dolphin (370.3 ± 579.4); and 
Stenurus ovatus infecting bottlenose and striped dolphins’ lungs (47.7 ± 76.5). 
This is the first citation of S. minor and S. ovatus in odontoceti from the 
Galician coast. Nematodes of the genus Stenurus are frequent in odontocetes 
stranded along the north-west Spanish coast. A clear host-parasite association 
was observed between S. minor and the Phocoenidae family, between S. 
globicephalae and the sub- family Globicephalinae and between S. ovatus and 
subfamily Delphininae. Different trophic position and niche segregation may 
lead to different patterns of specificity.

The article is open access, feel free to read it in the following link: 
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijppaw.2022.09.002

For further information don't hesitate to contact me at 
ana.saldana.r...@rai.usc.es

Best wishes,
Ana Saldaña
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