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COXIELLA BURNETI IN KANGAROOS AND KANGAROO TICKS IN WESTERN QUEENSLAND
Author(s) -
Pope JH,
Scott W,
Dwyer R
Publication year - 1960
Publication title -
australian journal of experimental biology and medical science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.999
H-Index - 104
eISSN - 1440-1711
pISSN - 0004-945X
DOI - 10.1038/icb.1960.3
Subject(s) - biology , haemaphysalis , tick , outbreak , q fever , zoology , macropus , veterinary medicine , marsupial , ecology , virology , ixodidae , medicine
SUMMARY Complement‐fixing antibodies to Coxiella burneti were present in 23 p.c. of kangaroos collected in western Queensland, and agglutinins in 15 p.c. Red kangaroos, Megaleia rufa , showed a higher incidence of complement‐fixing antibodies (33 p.c.) than grey kangaroos, Macropus major (12 p.c.). In three areas, the incidence of complement‐fixing antibody in M. rufa was between 46 and 54 p.c. C. burneti was isolated in mice from the blood of one Macropus major. Thirteen isolations were made from nearly 3,000 ornate kangaroo ticks, Amblyomma triguttatum , collected from kangaroos, goats and sheep. The titre of infectivity of infected ticks for mice was usually in the range 10 −6 to 10 −9 . Infection of kangaroos and A. triguttatum was found over a considerable area, between 24 and 28° S. and 144 and 149° E., in western Queensland. It thus seems probable that a natural kangaroo‐tick cycle exists. The three‐host life cycle and wide host range of this tick would allow it to spread infection to domestic animals as well as kangaroos. Infestation of sheep would bring infected ticks into contact also with workers in the sheep‐shearing industry, and was probably responsible for recent outbreaks of Q fever among them.

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