Bhartiya Krishi Anusandhan Patrika
  • Year: 2016
  • Volume: 31
  • Issue: 1

Cestodiasis in scaly-bellied woodpeckers (Picus squamatus) Of Kashmir

  • Author:
  • Nawab Nashiruddullah1,, Jafrin Ara Ahmed1, Sanku Borkataki1, Anand Kumar Pathak1, Pankaj Goswami1, Abdur Rezzaque Choudhary1
  • Total Page Count: 4
  • Page Number: 74 to 77

1Faculty of Veterinary Sciences and Animal Husbandry, Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Science and Technology of Kashmir, Shrinagar

Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Sciences and Technology of Jammu, R. S. Pura-181102, (Jammu and Kashmir) India

*Corresponding author: nawabn1@rediffmail.com

Online published on 13 December, 2017.

Abstract

A fortuitous investigation of two scaly-bellied woodpeckers (Picus squamatus) died due to fatal traumatic injury in separate incidences in Kashmir led to the spontaneous finding of heavy cestode infection. The cestodes were identified as Choanotaenia infundibulum and Raillietina cesticillus. The pathology associated with both parasites were not severe. The scolices were found to embed superficially in the intestinal mocous with mild cellular infiltration in the submucosa. The presence of abundant ants, ant-eggs and larvae in the intestinal content of both birds suggest them as a primary diet of the birds, and also to speculate their potential as intermediate host for the parasite's dissemination. This probably is the new host record for the Cestodes-R. cesticillus and C. infundibulum, which could suggest a very wide host range for the parasites probably mediated by some common intermediate hosts.