Study On the Parasites of Falcons in the United Arab Emirates

Sakers Falco cherrug, Gyrfalcons Falco rusticolus, Peregrines Falco peregrilllls, in addition to Hybrids (saker X gyrfalcon, or gyrfalcon X peregrine), were found to be the most popular species of falcons in United Arab Emirates (UAE). The importance of falcons and falconry in Arabia was highlighted...

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Main Author: Sultan Al-Ulama, Mohammad Ismail M. A
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Scholarworks@UAEU 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.uaeu.ac.ae/all_theses/665
https://scholarworks.uaeu.ac.ae/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1672&context=all_theses
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spelling ftuaeuniv:oai:scholarworks.uaeu.ac.ae:all_theses-1672 2023-05-15T16:10:06+02:00 Study On the Parasites of Falcons in the United Arab Emirates Sultan Al-Ulama, Mohammad Ismail M. A 1997-05-01T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarworks.uaeu.ac.ae/all_theses/665 https://scholarworks.uaeu.ac.ae/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1672&context=all_theses unknown Scholarworks@UAEU https://scholarworks.uaeu.ac.ae/all_theses/665 https://scholarworks.uaeu.ac.ae/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1672&context=all_theses Theses Environmental Sciences text 1997 ftuaeuniv 2022-02-25T06:56:26Z Sakers Falco cherrug, Gyrfalcons Falco rusticolus, Peregrines Falco peregrilllls, in addition to Hybrids (saker X gyrfalcon, or gyrfalcon X peregrine), were found to be the most popular species of falcons in United Arab Emirates (UAE). The importance of falcons and falconry in Arabia was highlighted with a brief history of falconry in Arabia. The study focused on the prevalence of intestinal parasites (coccidia, helminthes and nematodes) and blood parasites (Haemoproteus sp. and Leucocytozoon sp.) as well as ecto-parasites (Ticks and Mites) of these falcons, with discussion on the possible sources of infection in view of the epizootiology of these parasites. 100 falcons, 89 females and 11 males, were studied at random. Of these 100 falcons, 50 falcons were considered as "resident falcons" having spent a period of 1-4 years in the UAE, the rest (50 falcons) with less than 1-year residence were considered "imported falcons". The falcons were identified, thin blood smears were taken stained with Giemsa, examined for blood parasites and positive smears were identified. Fresh feces were collected for macroscopic examination to recognize adult worms, segments of tapeworms or fly larvae, then fecal materials were prepared (direct and floatation methods) for microscopic examination to detect protozoan cyst and helminthes eggs. Three techniques: feathers inspection, insecticide spray, and shaking the body in full sun light, were used for collecting ecto-parasites. The results were presented in term of numbers and percentages of non-infected and infected imported and resident falcons in relation to species and sex. 52% (26/50) of imported falcons showed parasitic infections, while 38% (19/50) of resident falcons were found to be infected. The results were compared with those of other researchers. Emphasis was also laid on the pathological aspects of parasitic infection in falcons. Recommendations that would lead to significant decrease in the infection rates in falcons in the UAE were made. Text Falco rusticolus gyrfalcon United Arab Emirates University: Scholarworks@UAEU
institution Open Polar
collection United Arab Emirates University: Scholarworks@UAEU
op_collection_id ftuaeuniv
language unknown
topic Environmental Sciences
spellingShingle Environmental Sciences
Sultan Al-Ulama, Mohammad Ismail M. A
Study On the Parasites of Falcons in the United Arab Emirates
topic_facet Environmental Sciences
description Sakers Falco cherrug, Gyrfalcons Falco rusticolus, Peregrines Falco peregrilllls, in addition to Hybrids (saker X gyrfalcon, or gyrfalcon X peregrine), were found to be the most popular species of falcons in United Arab Emirates (UAE). The importance of falcons and falconry in Arabia was highlighted with a brief history of falconry in Arabia. The study focused on the prevalence of intestinal parasites (coccidia, helminthes and nematodes) and blood parasites (Haemoproteus sp. and Leucocytozoon sp.) as well as ecto-parasites (Ticks and Mites) of these falcons, with discussion on the possible sources of infection in view of the epizootiology of these parasites. 100 falcons, 89 females and 11 males, were studied at random. Of these 100 falcons, 50 falcons were considered as "resident falcons" having spent a period of 1-4 years in the UAE, the rest (50 falcons) with less than 1-year residence were considered "imported falcons". The falcons were identified, thin blood smears were taken stained with Giemsa, examined for blood parasites and positive smears were identified. Fresh feces were collected for macroscopic examination to recognize adult worms, segments of tapeworms or fly larvae, then fecal materials were prepared (direct and floatation methods) for microscopic examination to detect protozoan cyst and helminthes eggs. Three techniques: feathers inspection, insecticide spray, and shaking the body in full sun light, were used for collecting ecto-parasites. The results were presented in term of numbers and percentages of non-infected and infected imported and resident falcons in relation to species and sex. 52% (26/50) of imported falcons showed parasitic infections, while 38% (19/50) of resident falcons were found to be infected. The results were compared with those of other researchers. Emphasis was also laid on the pathological aspects of parasitic infection in falcons. Recommendations that would lead to significant decrease in the infection rates in falcons in the UAE were made.
format Text
author Sultan Al-Ulama, Mohammad Ismail M. A
author_facet Sultan Al-Ulama, Mohammad Ismail M. A
author_sort Sultan Al-Ulama, Mohammad Ismail M. A
title Study On the Parasites of Falcons in the United Arab Emirates
title_short Study On the Parasites of Falcons in the United Arab Emirates
title_full Study On the Parasites of Falcons in the United Arab Emirates
title_fullStr Study On the Parasites of Falcons in the United Arab Emirates
title_full_unstemmed Study On the Parasites of Falcons in the United Arab Emirates
title_sort study on the parasites of falcons in the united arab emirates
publisher Scholarworks@UAEU
publishDate 1997
url https://scholarworks.uaeu.ac.ae/all_theses/665
https://scholarworks.uaeu.ac.ae/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1672&context=all_theses
genre Falco rusticolus
gyrfalcon
genre_facet Falco rusticolus
gyrfalcon
op_source Theses
op_relation https://scholarworks.uaeu.ac.ae/all_theses/665
https://scholarworks.uaeu.ac.ae/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1672&context=all_theses
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