Cats should be wormed every three months. If your cat is a prolific gecko hunter consider worming monthly, especially in the wet season.
Those Miserable Freeloaders!When talking about diseases which affect frogs, the parasite group is often overlooked. This group includes tapeworms, nematodes, flukes, trematodes (flatworms), filaria, protozoa and fly larvae. In the past, it was thought that parasites weren't too detrimental to the frog's well being - just incidental freeloaders - and they weren't supposed to be capable of actually causing the frog's death. However, the pathology results from frogs that we received during the North Queensland winters of 1999 through 2002 revealed that the worms themselves were the cause of death in these frogs. The worms are actually the middle domino in a set. It is now believed that a disease pathogen is first getting into some frogs and disabling their immune system. Once that has occured, the frog has lost its biological defense system and becomes prey to a variety of parasites which infest the frog in huge One of the nastiest parasites being seen thus far is the tapeworm Spirometra erinacei (see photo below) which becomes a breeding adult once it has been picked up by cats. This worm migrates through several internal organs in the frog, damaging them as it goes, until it finally burrows into the muscle tissues in the thighs. Once There is a special worming regime needed to kill spirometra in cats and this is described on our Cat Alert page in the threats to frogs section. As more of our backlog of specimens is tested, more and more parasite problems are emerging. A blood parasite called a Filaroid has been found at massive infestation levels in emaciated frogs which were turned in during our very dry winter and excessively hot spring in 2001. We've also found Capillaria (threadworms, bladder worms) in many frogs, Rhabdias (a lung parasite), nematodes and flatworms. Hydatid parasites also cause an unusual symptom of turning the frog's dorsal skin black, like soft rubber, which then smears off. Some worms could not be identified and have been sent on to other researchers who might be able to identify them using DNA analysis. Some worms show up in the most unusual places such as these flatworms (right) which were found infesting the liver of a squamous cell cancer case.
Another prominent parasite of the Far North is not a worm but a maggot which usually only occupies the frog on a temporary basis and we've given this temporary house guest its own page. While cleaning out a large backyard pond in Smithfield, Cairns, every tadpole we found had these snowflake-like growths all over the body. Some successfully metamorphed but died within days. The lab result identified the growths as a soil parasite
Last updated: May 14th, 2006
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