Hyönteisvälitteiset sukkulamadot (Filarioidea) porolla Suomessa – kirjallisuuskatsaus

The most common insect-borne nematode parasites of reindeer in Finland are Setaria tundra, Rumenfilaria andersoni and Onchocerca tarsicola. These parasites are new for reindeer and likely resettled by host switching from other cervids since 1970’s. Reindeer have not adapted to these parasites and th...

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Main Authors: Havela, Emmaleena, Oksanen, Antti, Laaksonen, Sauli
Other Authors: Kliinisen tuotantoeläinlääketieteen osasto, Eläinlääketieteellinen tiedekunnan osastot
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Finnish
Published: Suomen eläinlääkäriyhdistys 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10138/587599
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author Havela, Emmaleena
Oksanen, Antti
Laaksonen, Sauli
author2 Kliinisen tuotantoeläinlääketieteen osasto
Eläinlääketieteellinen tiedekunnan osastot
author_facet Havela, Emmaleena
Oksanen, Antti
Laaksonen, Sauli
author_sort Havela, Emmaleena
collection HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository
description The most common insect-borne nematode parasites of reindeer in Finland are Setaria tundra, Rumenfilaria andersoni and Onchocerca tarsicola. These parasites are new for reindeer and likely resettled by host switching from other cervids since 1970’s. Reindeer have not adapted to these parasites and that is why they cause pathological changes in tissues of a new host species. These parasites have caused several outbreaks in the Finnish reindeer herding area. In addition, Lappnema auris has been discovered rarely in Finland. Insect-borne parasites deteriorate reindeer welfare, decrease calves’ carcass weight and cause condemnations at meat inspection. Among other things, efficient insect transmission and ivermectin resistance make the prevention of these parasites difficult. Through systematic antiparasitic treatment, predicting outbreaks and slowing down climate change it is possible to decrease the impact of these parasites on the welfare of reindeer and on reindeer husbandry. Of the parasites discovered in Finland, the prevention of S. tundra is based on regular and extensive antiparasitic treatment of reindeer. Rumenfilaria andersoni and probably Onchocerca spp. are resistant to ivermectin and therefore cannot be prevented by routine antiparasitic treatment. It is almost impossible to affect the number of insects. Climate change is predicted to increase the spread of insect-borne parasites and enable the parasites to spread into native areas further North. Peer reviewed
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre reindeer husbandry
Tundra
genre_facet reindeer husbandry
Tundra
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institution Open Polar
language Finnish
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op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10138/587599
op_rights cc_by
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spelling ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/587599 2025-02-16T15:09:41+00:00 Hyönteisvälitteiset sukkulamadot (Filarioidea) porolla Suomessa – kirjallisuuskatsaus Insect borne nematodes (Filarioidea) in reindeer in Finland – Review Havela, Emmaleena Oksanen, Antti Laaksonen, Sauli Kliinisen tuotantoeläinlääketieteen osasto Eläinlääketieteellinen tiedekunnan osastot 2024-11-05T13:54:03Z 7 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10138/587599 fin fin Suomen eläinlääkäriyhdistys http://hdl.handle.net/10138/587599 cc_by info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess openAccess Eläinlääketiede Artikkeli publishedVersion 2024 ftunivhelsihelda 2025-01-21T16:11:30Z The most common insect-borne nematode parasites of reindeer in Finland are Setaria tundra, Rumenfilaria andersoni and Onchocerca tarsicola. These parasites are new for reindeer and likely resettled by host switching from other cervids since 1970’s. Reindeer have not adapted to these parasites and that is why they cause pathological changes in tissues of a new host species. These parasites have caused several outbreaks in the Finnish reindeer herding area. In addition, Lappnema auris has been discovered rarely in Finland. Insect-borne parasites deteriorate reindeer welfare, decrease calves’ carcass weight and cause condemnations at meat inspection. Among other things, efficient insect transmission and ivermectin resistance make the prevention of these parasites difficult. Through systematic antiparasitic treatment, predicting outbreaks and slowing down climate change it is possible to decrease the impact of these parasites on the welfare of reindeer and on reindeer husbandry. Of the parasites discovered in Finland, the prevention of S. tundra is based on regular and extensive antiparasitic treatment of reindeer. Rumenfilaria andersoni and probably Onchocerca spp. are resistant to ivermectin and therefore cannot be prevented by routine antiparasitic treatment. It is almost impossible to affect the number of insects. Climate change is predicted to increase the spread of insect-borne parasites and enable the parasites to spread into native areas further North. Peer reviewed Article in Journal/Newspaper reindeer husbandry Tundra HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository
spellingShingle Eläinlääketiede
Havela, Emmaleena
Oksanen, Antti
Laaksonen, Sauli
Hyönteisvälitteiset sukkulamadot (Filarioidea) porolla Suomessa – kirjallisuuskatsaus
title Hyönteisvälitteiset sukkulamadot (Filarioidea) porolla Suomessa – kirjallisuuskatsaus
title_full Hyönteisvälitteiset sukkulamadot (Filarioidea) porolla Suomessa – kirjallisuuskatsaus
title_fullStr Hyönteisvälitteiset sukkulamadot (Filarioidea) porolla Suomessa – kirjallisuuskatsaus
title_full_unstemmed Hyönteisvälitteiset sukkulamadot (Filarioidea) porolla Suomessa – kirjallisuuskatsaus
title_short Hyönteisvälitteiset sukkulamadot (Filarioidea) porolla Suomessa – kirjallisuuskatsaus
title_sort hyönteisvälitteiset sukkulamadot (filarioidea) porolla suomessa – kirjallisuuskatsaus
topic Eläinlääketiede
topic_facet Eläinlääketiede
url http://hdl.handle.net/10138/587599