
The raccoon roundworm specimens that ARS zoologist
Eric Hoberg is examining are part of the U.S. National Parasite Collection in
Beltsville, Md. Click the image for more information about it.
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ARS Parasite Collections Assist Research and
Diagnoses
By Sharon
Durham
January 28, 2010 Collections of organisms that cause
harm, disease and damage are important in allowing
Agricultural Research Service (ARS)
scientists to explore the diversity, evolution, and distribution of parasites
and pathogens.
ARS researchers have assembled and maintained invertebrate protist
collections at three locations for the purpose of in-house and joint projects.
Protists are organisms with simple cellular structures, and can live in any
environment that contains water.
At the
Center
for Medical, Agricultural and Veterinary Entomology (CMAVE), in
Gainesville, Fla., researchers are using a collection of microsporidia to act
as soldiers of biological warfare at the tiniest level against red imported
fire ants.
CMAVE entomologist
David
Oi is using species of spore-producing insect pathogens, such as
Kneallhazia solenopsae, to bring about declines in red imported fire ant
(Solenopsis invicta) populations. In Argentina, these infectious
soldiers are associated with localized declines of 53 percent to 100 percent in
fire ant populations, according to Oi.
In addition, Oi and CMAVE colleagues
Sanford
Porter and
Steven
Valles were able to get K. solenopsae to infect phorid flies without
harming them. Thats important because phorid flies may serve as vectors
to infect red imported fire ants with the microsporidiaperhaps
facilitating the spread of infection to other colonies.
Invertebrate protist collections are also maintained at ARS facilities in
Sidney, Mont., and Manhattan, Kan.
ARS also keeps archival collections of parasites, such as tapeworms, for
research, identification and diagnostic purposes. The vast majority of these
are in the U.S.
National Parasite Collection, curated by zoologist
Eric
Hoberg in the ARS
Animal
Parasitic Diseases Laboratory in Beltsville, Md.
This collection was established in 1892 and is among the largest parasite
collections in the world. It holds more than 20 million catalogued specimens
representing nematodes, tapeworms, flukes and some parasitic arthropods, such
as fleas, ticks and lice. Such archives provide a foundation to identify
shifting geographic and host ranges for parasites and diseases that may emerge
with accelerated global climate change.
Read
more about this and other important collections in the January 2010 issue
of Agricultural Research magazine.
ARS is the primary intramural scientific research agency of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture.