Hostname: page-component-7bb8b95d7b-5mhkq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-09-25T16:45:03.125Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Checklist of parasites associated with ʻreptiles’ in Northeast Brazil

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 January 2023

G. M. C. Lacerda*
Affiliation:
Programa de Pós-Graduação em Diversidade Biológica e Recursos Naturais (PPGDR), Centro de Ciências Biológicas e da Saúde – CCBS, Universidade Regional do Cariri - URCA, Rua Cel. Antônio Luiz, 1161, Pimenta, CEP 63105-000, Crato, CE, Brazil Laboratório de Biologia e Ecologia de Animais Silvestres - LABEAS, Instituto de Formação de Educadores – IFE, Universidade Federal do Cariri – UFCA, Rua Olegário Emídio de Araújo, Centro, Campus Brejo Santo, CEP 63260-000, Brejo Santo, CE, Brazil
J. de A. Santana
Affiliation:
Laboratório de Biologia e Ecologia de Animais Silvestres - LABEAS, Instituto de Formação de Educadores – IFE, Universidade Federal do Cariri – UFCA, Rua Olegário Emídio de Araújo, Centro, Campus Brejo Santo, CEP 63260-000, Brejo Santo, CE, Brazil
J. A. de Araujo Filho
Affiliation:
Programa de Pós-Graduação em Diversidade Biológica e Recursos Naturais (PPGDR), Centro de Ciências Biológicas e da Saúde – CCBS, Universidade Regional do Cariri - URCA, Rua Cel. Antônio Luiz, 1161, Pimenta, CEP 63105-000, Crato, CE, Brazil Laboratório de Biologia e Ecologia de Animais Silvestres - LABEAS, Instituto de Formação de Educadores – IFE, Universidade Federal do Cariri – UFCA, Rua Olegário Emídio de Araújo, Centro, Campus Brejo Santo, CEP 63260-000, Brejo Santo, CE, Brazil
S. C Ribeiro
Affiliation:
Programa de Pós-Graduação em Diversidade Biológica e Recursos Naturais (PPGDR), Centro de Ciências Biológicas e da Saúde – CCBS, Universidade Regional do Cariri - URCA, Rua Cel. Antônio Luiz, 1161, Pimenta, CEP 63105-000, Crato, CE, Brazil Laboratório de Biologia e Ecologia de Animais Silvestres - LABEAS, Instituto de Formação de Educadores – IFE, Universidade Federal do Cariri – UFCA, Rua Olegário Emídio de Araújo, Centro, Campus Brejo Santo, CEP 63260-000, Brejo Santo, CE, Brazil
*
Author for correspondence: G. M. C. Lacerda, E-mail: gloriamaria753@gmail.com
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Reptiles, as well as other vertebrate groups, harbour a significant diversity of parasitic organisms, from nematodes and other helminths to viruses and bacteria. The Northeast is one of the richest regions in Brazil in terms of the reptile diversity, number of species and endemism. Parasites are diverse organisms and knowledge about the parasitic fauna of vertebrates is an important factor in understanding the ecological relationships between hosts and the environment. Studies on the parasitic fauna of reptiles in South America have increased in the past few years. The present review is a compilation of 122 studies published from 1924 to 2021. We present information on 101 species of reptiles from five groups (amphisbaenians, crocodile, testudines, snakes and lizards) and 183 parasitic taxa belonging to four phyla: Nematoda; Arthropoda; Platyhelminthes; and Acanthocephala. Nematodes were the most frequently recorded species. Lizards and snakes had more records of parasitism and higher levels of parasite richness and diversity. Ceará was the state with most studies and recorded cases of parasite–host association. The Caatinga and Atlantic Forest were the most investigated environments. The objective of this review was to contribute knowledge on the parasitic biodiversity in reptiles from Northeast Brazil, which may help identify gaps in our knowledge and guide future studies.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

Introduction

Parasites are incredibly diverse microorganisms and play an essential role in ecological and evolutionary processes (Gómez & Nichols, Reference Gómez and Nichols2013). For instance, they are some of the main regulators of some vertebrate species populations (Watson, Reference Watson2013), therefore, they should be considered important elements for conservation (Gómez & Nichols, Reference Gómez and Nichols2013). The term ‘parasite’ encompasses a diverse range of life forms that are usually smaller in size than their hosts, can inhabit them externally or internally and have a population distribution that varies from homogeneous to aggregate, making distribution difficult. The lack of knowledge about diversity can also be linked to limited sampling efforts (Okamura et al., Reference Okamura, Hartigan and Naldoni2018).

Reptiles comprise an essential group of terrestrial vertebrates with more than 11,500 species known worldwide (Uetz & Hosek, Reference Uetz and Hosek2022), and about 848 species in Brazil (Costa et al., Reference Costa, Guedes and Bérbils2021). They are crucial in developing conservation strategies, especially in discontinuous or isolated environments (Rodrigues, Reference Rodrigues2003), as they are ecosystem agents capable of influencing important environmental changes (Miranda, Reference Miranda2017), and they also have significant economic and social importance (Boas et al., Reference Boas, De Vasconcelos Camargo, Junqueira, Venturelli and Albo2014). Despite all this, among the vertebrates, the reptiles have some of the fewest descriptions of their parasitic fauna (Carlson et al., Reference Carlson, Dallas, Alexander, Phelan and Phillips2020).

More than 400 species of reptiles can be found in Northeast Brazil, making it the second richest region in the country in terms of reptile biodiversity (Costa et al., Reference Costa, Guedes and Bérbils2021). Important surveys on the parasitic fauna of reptiles have been carried out in Brazil and South America (Vicente et al., Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993; Ávila & Silva, Reference Ávila and Silva2010); however, the discovery of new parasitic species, points of occurrence and parasite–host associations make reviewing this information an ongoing and necessary process. Surveys and reviews of the parasitic fauna contribute to global estimates of the diversity and distribution of these organisms, revealing the evolutionary history of related species (González et al., Reference González, Hamann and Duré2021), and serving as an essential source of information for future research.

This study presents a compilation of data on parasitism in reptiles from Northeast Brazil, indicating the host and parasite species, the location of the association's record, parasitized organs and authors of the original records. It also lists the number of parasitic species, diversity, distribution and host range.

Material and methods

Study area

The Northeast Brazil region is located in the eastern end of tropical South America (Molion & Bernardo, Reference Molion and Bernardo2002), it is about 1,558,196 km2, equivalent to 18% of the national territory (Silva et al., Reference Silva, Pereira, Azevedo, de Sousa and Sousa2011), and comprises nine states: Maranhão; Piauí; Ceará; Rio Grande do Norte; Paraíba; Pernambuco; Alagoas; Sergipe; and Bahia (fig. 1). The region is divided into four major regions: Mata, Agreste, Sertão and Meio-Norte (Garcia, Reference Garcia2017), where portions of biomes such as the Atlantic Forest and the Cerrado, are found (BRASIL, 2017); however, the Caatinga is the predominant biome (Araújo, Reference Araújo, Villagra, Melo, Romaniuc-Neto and Barbosa2014). Four types of climates are present in Northeast Brazil: equatorial humid; coastal humid; tropical; and tropical semi-arid (Silva et al., Reference Silva, Pereira, Azevedo, de Sousa and Sousa2011). In terms of herpetofauna, it is the second richest region in Brazil, housing about 180 species of amphibians (Freitas, Reference Freitas2011), and 389 species (406 species + subspecies) of reptiles (Costa et al., Reference Costa, Guedes and Bérbils2021).

Fig. 1. Northeast Brazil and its nine states: MA, Maranhão; PI, Piauí; CE, Ceará; RN, Rio Grande do Norte; PB, Paraíba; PE, Pernambuco; AL, Alagoas; SE, Sergipe; and BA, Bahia.

Literature research and review

The literature on parasitism in reptiles from Northeast Brazil is based on information obtained from online databases (such as PubMed, BioOne, Jstor, Scielo, Google Scholar, Web de Science and ScienceDirect). Scientific notes, articles, books, book chapters, dissertations, theses and published manuscripts were analysed. Works published between the years 1924 and 2021 were considered. In each study the host species, associated parasites, infected organs and the location of the record were analysed. The groups of reptiles included in this study were amphisbaenians, testudines, snakes, crocodiles and lizards. For parasites were considered: helminths; pentastomids; ticks; and mites.

For host taxonomy we followed Costa et al. (Reference Costa, Guedes and Bérbils2021) and the taxonomy of parasites we followed Anderson et al. (Reference Anderson, Chabaud and Willmott2009) for nematodes, Christoffersen & De Assis (Reference Christoffersen and De Assis2013) for pentastomids, Amin (Reference Amin2013) for acanthocephalans, Lunaschi & Drago (Reference Lunaschi and Drago2007) and Fernandes & Kohn (Reference Fernandes and Kohn2014) for trematodes, Paredes-León et al. (Reference Paredes-León, Garcia-Prieto, Guzman-Cornejo, Leon-Regagnon and Perez2008) and Cuellar et al. (Reference Cuellar, Sáez, Cantú, Sánchez, Mendoza, Conga, Cruces, Luque and Chero2022) for cestodes, Barros-Battesti et al. (Reference Barros-Battesti, Arzua and Bechara2006), Martins et al. (Reference Martins, Onofrio, Barros-Battesti and Labruna2010), Andreotti et al. (Reference Andreotti, Koller and Garcia2016), Nava et al. (Reference Nava, Venzal, González-Acuña, Martins and Guglielmone2017) for ticks and varied literature for mites (Paredes-León et al., Reference Paredes-León, Garcia-Prieto, Guzman-Cornejo, Leon-Regagnon and Perez2008; Mendoza-Roldan et al., Reference Mendoza-Roldan, Ribeiro and Castilho-Onofrio2020). For all groups of parasites, the SiBBr (Information System on Brazilian Biodiversity, n.d.) database was also consulted.

The hosts’ names are listed in alphabetical order and parasites are presented in alphabetical order under their Phylum, Class, Order, Family and Genus. Hosts and localities bear a number in parentheses that identifies the locality and reference of each original record. The site of infection in some cases was described as ‘Not specified’ because it was not reported in the original record. The remarks sections contain information and mention taxonomy data on hosts and parasites. Abbreviations for localities cited are: Maranhão (MA); Piauí (PI); Ceará (CE); Rio Grande do Norte (RN); Paraíba (PB); Pernambuco (PE); Alagoas (AL); Sergipe (SE); and Bahia (BA). Other relevant abbreviations include: ESEC (Ecological Station); RPPN (Private Natural Heritage Reserve); and REBIO (Biological Reserve).

Results

We report 183 parasite taxa belonging to four phyla for Northeast Brazilian reptiles: Nematoda (20 families and 38 genera); Arthropoda (12 families and 9 genera); Platyhelminthes (14 families and 21 genera); and Acanthocephala (three families and three genera). These were registered for 101 host species: seven amphisbaenas; one crocodile species; seven testudines (two species of Chelidae, two Cheloniidae, one Kinosternidae and two Testudinidae); 30 snakes; and 56 lizards. All states presented records of parasitism for at least one group of reptile included in this study. Ceará was the state with the highest number of investigations (about 44% of all studies), followed by Pernambuco (26%), Bahia and Paraiba (both with 13%), Rio Grande do Norte (7%), Piauí and Sergipe (6% each), Maranhão (3%) and Alagoas (2%). Ceará was also the state with the highest quantity and diversity of investigated reptile species (42) (fig. 2), followed by Pernambuco (38), Bahia (29), Paraíba (24), Sergipe (16), Rio Grande do Norte (12), Piauí (6), and Maranhão and Alagoas (five species in each state). The Caatinga and Atlantic Forest were the most investigated environments. In both, lizards were the most studied group regarding parasite fauna, followed by snakes, amphisbaenas and testudines. The Cerrado presented a low number of records, both of host and parasite species.

Fig. 2. Number of reptiles’ species with recorded parasite–host association in each state of Northeast Brazil

ACANTHOCEPHALA

Phylum: Acanthocephala Kohlreuther, 1771

Class: Archiacanthocephala Meyer, 1931

Order: Oligacanthorhynchida Petrochenko, 1956

Family: Oligacanthorhynchidae Southwell & Macfie, 1925

Oligacanthorhynchus Travassos, 1915

Oligacanthorhynchus sp.

Hosts: Ameiva ameiva (1), Ameivula ocellifera (2), Gymnodactylus geckoides (2), Philodryas nattereri (4), Phyllopezus pollicaris (2), Pseudoboa nigra (5), Tropidurus hispidus (6), Tropidurus semitaeniatus (2, 7)

Localities: (1) Mata do Pau Ferro – PB; (2) Alto Sertão – SE; (3) Mata de Goiamunduba, Mata Sítio Socorro – PB; (4) Exu – PE; (5) Piauí – PI, Ceará – CE, Pernambuco – PE; (6) ESEC Aiuaba, Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN; (7) Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN

Infection sites: Coelomic cavity, cavity, stomach, small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020); (2) Araújo Filho et al. (Reference Araújo Filho, Teixeira, Teles, Rocha, Almeida, Mesquita and Lacerda2020); (3) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020, Reference Teixeira, Sampaio, Araujo-Filho, Teles, Almeida, Mesquita and Brito2021); (4) Araújo Filho et al. (Reference Araújo Filho, Teles, Teixeira, Sakamoto, Pinto, Silva and Almeida2018); (5) Matias et al. (Reference Matias, Silva, Sousa and Ávila2018); (6) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Ferreira, Ribeiro, Anjos, Almeida, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014a, Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellosb); (7) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014b)

Class: Palaeacanthocephala Meyer, 1931

Order: Polymorphida Petrochenko, 1956

Family: Centrorhynchidae Van Cleave, 1916

Centrorhynchidae undetermined

Hosts: Hemidactylus agrius (1), Hemidactylus mabouia (2)

Localities: (1) Fazenda Experimental Vale do Curu – CE; (2) Paulino Neves – MA, Parnaíba – PI

Infection site: Body cavity.

References: (1) Anjos et al. (Reference Anjos, Holanda Bezerra, Cunha Passos, Zanchi and Barbosa Galdino2011); (2) Bezerra et al. (Reference Bezerra, Pinheiro, Melo, Braga, Anjos and Borges-Nojosa2020)

Centrorhynchus Lutz, 1913

Centrorhynchus sp.

Host: Erythrolamprus viridis

Locality: Várzea Alegre, Aiuaba – CE.

Infection site: Body cavity.

Reference: Quirino et al. (Reference Quirino, Ferreira, Silva, Silva, Morais and Ávila2018)

Cistacant of Centrorhynchus sp.

Host: Anolis fuscoauratus

Locality: Serra de Maranguape, Serra de Baturité, Parque Nacional Ubajara – CE

Infection site: Coelomic cavity.

Reference: Mesquita et al. (Reference Mesquita, Oliveira, Perez and Ávila2020)

Remarks: Called Norops fuscoauratus in this paper.

Order: Echinorhynchida Southwell & Macfie, 1925

Family: Echinorhynchidae Cobbold, 1876

Echinorhynchidae undetermined

Host: Psychosaura macrorhyncha

Locality: Trancoso – BA

Infection site: Stomach tract.

Reference: Vrcibradic et al. (Reference Vrcibradic, Rocha and Van Sluys2001)

Remarks: Called M. macrorhyncha in this paper.

Acanthocephalus Kohlreuther, 1771

Acanthocephalus sp.

Host: Pseudoboa nigra

Localities: Ceará – CE, Pernambuco – PE

Infection site: Stomach.

Reference: Matias et al. (Reference Matias, Silva, Sousa and Ávila2018)

Cistacant undetermined

Hosts: Ameivula ocellifera (1), Ameivula pyrrhogularis (3), Gymnodactylus darwinii (7), Gymnodactylus geckoides (1, 2), Leptodeira annulata (4), Philodryas olfersii (5), Phyllopezus pollicaris (1), Tropidurus hispidus (1), Tropidurus semitaeniatus (1), Trachylepis atlântica (6)

Localities: (1) Alto Sertão – SE; (2) ESEC Aiuaba, Cuncas – CE; (3) ESEC Aiuaba, Cuncas, Dom Quintino, Quitaiús – CE; (4) Aiuaba, Barro, Farias Brito, Jati, Mauriti – CE; (5) Ilha Grande – PI; (6) Fernando de Noronha – PE; (7) Mata do Camucim, Mata do Tapacurá, São Lourenço da Mata – PE

Infection sites: Stomach, body cavity and wall of the gastrointestinal tract.

References: (1) Araújo Filho et al. (Reference Araújo Filho, Teixeira, Teles, Rocha, Almeida, Mesquita and Lacerda2020); (2) Alcantara et al., Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Gonçalves-Sousa, Morais and Ávila2019); (3) Silva et al. (Reference Silva, Manoel, Uieda, Avila and Silva2019b); (4) Carvalho et al. (Reference Carvalho, Silva-Neta, Silva, Oliveira, Nunes, Souza and Ávila2018); (5) Castro Araújo et al. (Reference Castro Araújo, Silva, Machado, Oliveira and Ávila2020); (6) Bursey et al. (Reference Bursey, Rocha, Menezes, Ariani and Vrcibradic2010); (7) Oitaven et al. (Reference Oitaven, da Silva Ribeiro, de Moura and de Oliveira2019)

Encysted larva

Host: Ameivula pyrrhogularis

Localities: ESEC Aiuaba, Cuncas, Dom Quintino, Quitaiús, – CE

Infection site: Not specified.

Reference: Silva et al. (Reference Silva, Manoel, Uieda, Avila and Silva2019b)

ARTHROPODA

Phylum: Arthropoda von Siebold, 1848

Class: Arachnida Lamarck, 1801

Family: Cheyletidae Leach, 1815

Cheyletidae

Host: Ameivula ocellifera

Localities: Santo Inácio – BA, Pirambu – SE

Infection site: Not specified.

Reference: Xavier et al. (Reference Xavier, Anjos, Gazêta, Machado, Storti-Melo and Dias2019)

Family: Glycyphagidae

Host: Ameivula ocellifera

Localities: Santo Inácio – BA, Pirambu – SE

Infection site: Not specified.

Reference: Xavier et al. (Reference Xavier, Anjos, Gazêta, Machado, Storti-Melo and Dias2019)

Order: Ixodida Leach, 1815

Family: Argasidae Murray, 1877

Ornithodoros Koch, 1844

Ornithodoros mimon Kohls, Clifford & Jones, 1969

Host: Corallus hortulana

Locality: Chapada do Araripe – CE

Infection site: Not specified.

Reference: Alcantara et al. (Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Ávila, Pacheco, Martins, Muñoz-Leal and Morais2018b)

Ornithodoros rietcorreai Labruna, Nava & Venzal, 2016

Host: Leptodeira annulata

Locality: Farias Brito – CE

Infection site: Not specified.

Reference: Alcantara et al. (Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Ávila, Pacheco, Martins, Muñoz-Leal and Morais2018b)

Ornithodoros sp.

Hosts: Leptodeira annulata (1), Oxyrhopus trigeminus (2), Philodryas olfersii (2)

Localities: (1) Jati – CE; (2) Barro – CE

Infection site: Not specified.

Reference: Alcantara et al. (Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Ávila, Pacheco, Martins, Muñoz-Leal and Morais2018b)

Family: Ixodidae Murray, 1877

Amblyomma Koch, 1844

Amblyomma dissimile Koch, 1844

Hosts: Ameiva ameiva (1), Iguana iguana (2), Tropidurus hispidus (3)

Localities: (1) Chapadinha – MA; (2) Ribeiro Gonçalves – PI; (3) São Lourenço da Mata – PE

Infection site: Near the mouth.

References: (1) Lopes et al. (Reference Lopes, Andrade and Costa-Júnior2010); (2) Alcantara et al. (Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Ávila, Pacheco, Martins, Muñoz-Leal and Morais2018b); (3) Dantas-Torres et al. (Reference Dantas-Torres, Oliveira-Filho, Soares, Souza, Valença and Sá2008)

Amblyomma fuscum Neumann, 1907

Hosts: Boa constrictor (1, 2, 3), Caiman latirostris (4)

Localities: (1) Parque dois Irmãos – PE; (2) Igarassu, São Lourenço da Mata – PE; (3) João Pessoa – PB, Recife – PE; (4) Estação Ecológica do Tapacurá, São Lourenço da Mata – PE

Infection site: Between the scales of the dorsal region of the body, ventral region.

References: (1) Cunha et al. (Reference Cunha, Farias, Brito and Serra-Freire1999); (2) Dantas-Torres et al. (Reference Dantas-Torres, Oliveira-Filho, Soares, Souza, Valença and Sá2008); (3) Dantas-Torres et al. (Reference Dantas-Torres, Ferreira, de Melo, Lima, Siqueira, Rameh-de-Albuquerque, Melo and Ramos2010); (4) Dantas-Torres et al. (Reference Dantas-Torres, Mascarenhas-Junior, Dos Anjos, Dos Santos and Correia2019)

Amblyomma rotundatum Koch, 1844

Hosts: Atractus guentheri (12), Boa constrictor (18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23), Bothrops leucurus (gr. atrox) (4, 5), Bothrops erythromelas (6), Caiman latirostris (1), Chelonoidis carbonarius (2), Chelonoidis denticulatus (2), Chironius flavolineatus (14), Corallus hortulana (18), Crotalus durissus cascavella (7), Drymarchon corais (13), Epicrates assissi (24), Epicrates cenchria (18); Eunectes murinus (25), Helicops carinicaudus (18), Iguana iguana (8, 9, 10), Lygophis dilepis (15), Mesoclemmys tuberculata (3), Micrurus ibiboboca (26), Micrurus lemniscatus (5), Oxyrhopus trigeminus (16), Philodryas olfersii (5) Philodryas nattereri (5), Tropidurus hispidus (11), Xenodon merremii (18), Xenopholis scalaris (17)

Localities: (1) Parque Dois Irmãos, Recife, Estação Ecológica do Tapacurá, São Lourenço da Mata – PE; (2, 18) Parque Dois Irmãos – PE; (3) Camaçari – BA; (4) Crato, Barbalha – CE; (5) Salvador – BA; (6) Farias Brito – CE; (7, 8) Igarassu – PE; (9, 24) Parque Arruda Câmara – PB; (10) Mata de São João – BA; (11) Aiuaba – CE; (12) Ilhéus – BA; (13) Guaramiranga – CE; (14) Caririaçu, Barbalha – CE; (15) Crato – CE; (16) ESEC Aiuaba, Barro – CE; (17) RPPN Pedra D'antas, Lagoa dos Gatos; (19) Mossoró – RN; (20) São Lourenço da Mata – PE; (21) João Pessoa – PB, Recife – PE; (22) Custódia – PE; (23) Salvador, Candeias, Feira de Santana, Mata de São João – BA; (25) Salvador, Lauro de Freitas, Feira de Santana – BA; (26) ESEC Aiuaba, Barbalha – CE

Infection site: Near the mouth, tail, near of the head, ventral region near the neck, head.

References: (1) Dantas-Torres et al. (Reference Dantas-Torres, Mascarenhas-Junior, Dos Anjos, Dos Santos and Correia2019); (2, 9, 21) Dantas-Torres et al. (Reference Dantas-Torres, Ferreira, de Melo, Lima, Siqueira, Rameh-de-Albuquerque, Melo and Ramos2010); (3, 5, 10, 23, 25) Fonseca et al. (Reference Fonseca, Bahiense and Silva2020); (4, 6, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17) Alcantara et al. (Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Ávila, Pacheco, Martins, Muñoz-Leal and Morais2018b); (7) Dantas-Torres et al. (Reference Dantas-Torres, Oliveira-Filho, Souza and Sá2005); (8, 20) Dantas-Torres et al. (Reference Dantas-Torres, Oliveira-Filho, Soares, Souza, Valença and Sá2008); (11) Quirino et al. (Reference Quirino, Alcantara, Silva, Ávila, Morais and Silva2016); (12) Mendoza-Roldan et al. (Reference Mendoza-Roldan, Ribeiro and Castilho-Onofrio2020); (18) Cunha et al. (Reference Cunha, Farias, Brito and Serra-Freire2003); (19) Labruna et al. (Reference Labruna, Ahid, Soares and Suassuna2007); (24) Batista et al. (Reference Batista, de Lucena, de Oliveira Filho, Nery, Martins and Pereira2021); (22) Horta et al. (Reference Horta, Do Nascimento, Martins, Labruna, Machado and Nicola2011); (26) Alcantara et al. (Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Ávila, Pacheco, Martins, Muñoz-Leal and Morais2018b)

Amblyomma sp.

Hosts: Ameiva ameiva (1), Anolis brasiliensis (7), Boa constrictor (2, 3), Bothrops leucurus (gr. atrox) (4), Chironius exoletus (10), Chironius flavolineatus (11), Copeoglossum arajara (5), Epicrates cenchria (2), Erythrolamprus viridis (12), Leptodeira annulata (13), Lygophis dilepis (14), Micrurus ibiboboca (6), Oxyrhopus trigeminus (15), Philodryas nattereri (16), Philodryas olfersii (17), Philodryas sp. (20), Pseudoboa nigra (18), Spilotes pullatus (20), Tantilla melanocephala (8), Tropidurus hispidus (8, 9), Tropidurus sp. (3), Xenopholis scalaris (19)

Localities: (1) Chapadinha – MA; (2) Parque Arruda Camara – PB, (3) Parque Estadual Dois Irmãos – PE; (4) Araripe – CE; (5) Ipú – CE;(6, 7) Crato – CE; (8) São Lourenço da Mata – PE; (9) Parque Nacional Serra de Itabaiana – SE; (10) Timon – MA; (11) Barbalha – CE; (12) Farias Brito – CE; (13) Várzea Alegre – CE; (14) Exu – PE; (15) Barbalha, Farias Brito – CE, Exu – PE, Quebrangulo – AL; (16) Barro – CE, Exu – PE; (17) Barro – CE; (18) Lavras da Mangabeira – CE, Ouricuri – PE; (19) RPPN Pedra D'antas, Lagoa dos Gatos – PE; (20) Recife – PE

Infection site: Right side of the entire neck ‘mite pocket’.

References: (1) Lopes et al. (Reference Lopes, Andrade and Costa-Júnior2010), (2, 3, 20) Dantas-Torres et al. (Reference Dantas-Torres, Ferreira, de Melo, Lima, Siqueira, Rameh-de-Albuquerque, Melo and Ramos2010); (4, 5, 6, 7, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19) Alcantara et al. (Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Ávila, Pacheco, Martins, Muñoz-Leal and Morais2018b); (8) Dantas-Torres et al. (Reference Dantas-Torres, Oliveira-Filho, Soares, Souza, Valença and Sá2008), (9) Santana et al. (Reference Santana, Caldas, de Queiroga Cavalcanti, Gomes, da Silva, dos Santos and Faria2017)

Remarks: Host A. brasiliensis reported in Alcantara et al. (Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Ávila, Pacheco, Martins, Muñoz-Leal and Morais2018b) as N. brasiliensis.

Order: Mesostigmata Canestrini, 1891

Mesostigmata

Hosts: Ameivula ocellifera, Ameivula nigrigula

Localities: Santo Inácio – BA, Pirambu – SE

Infection site: Not specified.

Reference: Xavier et al. (Reference Xavier, Anjos, Gazêta, Machado, Storti-Melo and Dias2019)

Family: Ascidae Oudemnas, 1905

Host: Ameivula nigrigula

Localities: Santo Inácio – BA, Pirambu – SE

Infection site: Not specified.

Reference: Xavier et al. (Reference Xavier, Anjos, Gazêta, Machado, Storti-Melo and Dias2019)

Family: Phytoseiidae Berlese, 1916

Hosts: Ameivula ocellifera, Ameivula nigrigula

Localities: Santo Inácio – BA, Pirambu – SE

Infection site: Not specified.

Reference: Xavier et al. (Reference Xavier, Anjos, Gazêta, Machado, Storti-Melo and Dias2019)

Order: Trombidiformes Reuter, 1909

Family: Pterygosomatidae Oudemans, 1910

Bertrandiella Paredes-Léon, Klompen and Pérez, 2012

Bertrandiella jimenezi Paredes-Léon & Morales-Malacara, 2012

Hosts: Gymnodactylus geckoides (1), Phyllopezus pollicaris (2)

Localities: (1) Piranhas – AL, Canindé de São Francisco – SE, Angicos – RN; (2) Piranhas – AL, Canindé de São Francisco – SE

Infection site: Not specified.

Reference: (1, 2) Mendoza-Roldan et al. (Reference Mendoza-Roldan, Ribeiro and Castilho-Onofrio2020)

Geckobia Mégnin, 1878

Geckobia hemidactyli Lawrence, 1936

Host: Hemidactylus mabouia

Locality: Mata de Tejipó - PE

Infection site: Axillary, dorsal, ventral and pelvic regions.

Reference: Oliveira et al. (Reference Oliveira, Campos, de Oliveira and de Moura2019c)

Geckobiella Hirst, 1917

Geckobiella harrisi Davidson, 1985

Host: Tropidurus hispidus

Locality: Mata de Tejipó – PE

Infection site: Mite pocket.

Reference: Oliveira et al. (Reference Oliveira, Campos, de Oliveira and de Moura2019c)

Geckobiella sp.

Host: Tropidurus hispidus

Locality: Chapada do Araripe – CE

Infection site: Evenly distributed by the scales all over the body.

Reference: Delfino et al. (Reference Delfino, Ribeiro, Furtado, Anjos and Almeida2011)

Prostigmata Kramer, 1877

Host: Ameivula ocellifera

Localities: Santo Inácio – BA, Pirambu – SE

Infection site: Not specified.

Reference: Xavier et al. (Reference Xavier, Anjos, Gazêta, Machado, Storti-Melo and Dias2019)

Tarsonemidae Kramer, 1877

Host: Ameivula ocellifera

Localities: Santo Inácio – BA, Pirambu – SE

Infection site: Not specified.

Reference: Xavier et al. (Reference Xavier, Anjos, Gazêta, Machado, Storti-Melo and Dias2019)

Family: Trombiculidae Ewing, 1929

Eutrombicula Ewing, 1938

Eutrombicula alfreddugesi Oudemnas, 1910

Hosts: Ameivula ocellifera (1), Ameivula nigrigula (1), Lygodactylus klugei (2), Strobilurus torquatus (3), Trachylepis atlântica (4), Tropidurus cocorobensis (5), Tropidurus erythrocephalus (5), Tropidurus hispidus (5) Tropidurus semitaeniatus (5), Tropidurus hispidus (6), Tropidurus torquatus (7)

Localities: (1) Santo Inácio – BA, Pirambu – SE; (2) Jati – CE; (3) Parque Nacional Serra de Iatabaiana – SE; (4) Fernando de Noronha – PE; (5) Morro do Chapéu – BA; (6) Chapada do Araripe – CE; (7) Trancoso, Prado – BA

Infection sites: All over the body, attached to the centre of the back, on the thigh, between the fingers, near the knee and mite pocket.

References: (1) Xavier et al. (Reference Xavier, Anjos, Gazêta, Machado, Storti-Melo and Dias2019), (2) Sousa et al. (Reference Sousa, Oliveira, Ferreira, Roberto and Ribeiro2021); (3) Silva et al. (Reference Silva, Xavier, dos Santos Carvalho, dos Anjos, Machado and dos Reis Dias2021); (4) Mendoza-Roldan et al. (Reference Mendoza-Roldan, Ribeiro and Castilho-Onofrio2020); (5) Menezes et al. (Reference Menezes, Fontes, Gettinger, Van Sluys and Rocha2011); (6) Delfino et al. (Reference Delfino, Ribeiro, Furtado, Anjos and Almeida2011); (7) Rocha et al. (Reference Rocha, Cunha-Barros, Menezes, Vrcibradic, Kiefer, Fontes, Van Sluys, Galdino and Maia-Carneiro2020)

Eutrombicula aff. alfreddugesi

Hosts: Tropidurus cocorobensis, Tropidurus erythrocephalus, Tropidurus hispidus, Tropidurus semitaeniatus

Locality: Morro do Chapéu – BA

Infection sites: Gular region and groin.

Reference: Rocha et al. (Reference Rocha, Cunha-Barros, Menezes, Fontes, Vrcibradic and Van Sluys2008)

Eutrombicula sp.

Host: Kentropyx calcarata

Locality: Mata de Tejipó, Recife – PE

Infection sites: Throat skin folds and post femoral regions.

Reference: Oliveira et al. (Reference Oliveira, Campos, de Oliveira and de Moura2019c)

NEMATODA

Phylum: Nematoda

Class: Secernentea

Order: Ascaridida Sprehn, 1927

Family: Anisakidae Skrjabin & Karokhin, 1945

Anisakis Dujardin, 1844

Anisakis sp. larvae

Host: Eretmochelys imbricata

Localities: Ceará – CE, Bahia – BA

Infection site: Liver.

Reference: Werneck et al. (Reference Werneck, Lima, Pires and Silva2015)

Family: Ascarididae Baird, 1853

Hexametra Travassos, 1919

Hexametra boddaertii Baird, 1860

Hosts: Ameivula ocellifera (1), Glaucomastix abaetensis (1), Leptodeira annulata (2), Pseudoboa nigra (3), Psychosaura macrorhyncha (4), Tropidurus hispidus (5)

Localities: (1) Dunas do Abaeté – BA; (2) Aiuaba, Barro, Farias Brito, Jati, Mauriti – CE; (3) Piauí – PI, Ceará – CE, Pernambuco – PE; (4) Trancoso – BA; (5) Fazenda Experimental do Vale do Curu – CE

Infection sites: Lung, body cavity, coelomic cavity, stomach and small intestine.

References: (1) Dias et al. (Reference Dias, Vrcibradic and Rocha2005); (2) Carvalho et al. (Reference Carvalho, Silva-Neta, Silva, Oliveira, Nunes, Souza and Ávila2018); (3) Matias et al. (Reference Matias, Silva, Sousa and Ávila2018); (4) Rocha & Vrcibradic (Reference Rocha and Vrcibradic2003); (4) Vrcibradic et al. (Reference Vrcibradic, Rocha and Van Sluys2001); (5) Galdino et al. (Reference Galdino, Ávila, Bezerra, Passos, Melo and Zanchi-Silva2014)

Remarks: Hosts A. ocellifera and G. abaetensis are reported in Dias et al. (Reference Dias, Vrcibradic and Rocha2005) as C. ocellifer and C. abaetensis, respectively. Host P. macrorhyncha reported in Vrcibradic et al. (Reference Vrcibradic, Rocha and Van Sluys2001) as M. macrorhyncha.

Ophidascaris Baylis, 1920

Ophidascaris cretinorum Freitas, 1968

Host: Ophidia undetermined

Locality: Maranhão – MA

Infection site: Stomach.

Reference: Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993)

Remarks: Host indicated by the original authors as probably being a cobra-coral.

Ophidascaris sp.

Host: Anolis brasiliensis

Locality: Crato – CE

Infection site: Stomach.

Reference: Amorim & Ávila (Reference Amorim and Ávila2019)

Remarks: Called Norops brasiliensis in this paper.

Family: Atractidae Railliet, 1917

Atractis Dujardin, 1845

Atractis sp.

Host: Iguana iguana

Localities: Aiuaba, Barro, Crato, Juazeiro do Norte, Santana do Cariri – CE, Exu, Moreilândia – PE

Infection sites: Small intestine and large intestine.

Reference: Teles et al. (Reference Teles, Brito, Teixeira, Ribeiro, Araujo-Filho, Lima, Pereira and Almeida2016)

Cyrtosomum Gedoelst, 1919

Cyrtosomum sp.

Host: Anolis fuscoauratus

Localities: Serra de Maranguape, Serra de Baturité, Parque Nacional Ubajara – CE

Infection site: Large intestine.

Reference: Mesquita et al. (Reference Mesquita, Oliveira, Perez and Ávila2020)

Remarks: Called Norops fuscoauratus in this paper.

Maracaya Díaz-Hungria, 1964

Maracaya graciai Díaz-Ungria, 1969

Host: Amphisbaena vermicularis

Localities: Abreu e Lima, Palmares, São Lourenço da Mata – PE

Infection sites: Small intestine and large intestine.

Reference: Oitaven et al. (Reference Oitaven, Barbosa de Moura, Ribeiro, Lisboa and Oliveira2021)

Family: Cosmocercidae Travassos, 1925

Cosmocercidae

Hosts: Anolis brasiliensis (1), Gymnodactylus geckoides (2), Tropidurus semitaeniatus (2), Vanzosaura multiscutata (2)

Localities: (1) Crato – CE; (2) Alto Sertão – SE

Infection sites: Cavity, coelom, stomach and large intestine.

References: (1) Amorim & Ávila (Reference Amorim and Ávila2019); (2) Araújo Filho et al. (Reference Araújo Filho, Teixeira, Teles, Rocha, Almeida, Mesquita and Lacerda2020)

Remarks: Host A. brasiliensis reported in Amorim & Ávila (Reference Amorim and Ávila2019) as Norops brasiliensis.

Aplectana Railliet & Henry, 1916

Aplectana albae Adamson & Baccam, 1988

Hosts: Amphisbaena alba, Amphisbaena ridleyi

Locality: Fernando de Noronha – PE

Infection site: Intestine.

References: Ramalho et al. (Reference Ramalho, da Silva, Schwartz and Péres2009); Ávila & Silva (Reference Ávila and Silva2010)

Aplectana nordestina De Amorim, Da Silva, Morais, Da Silva, Ávila, 2017

Host: Leposternon polystegum

Localities: São Gonçalo do Amarante, Trairi, Paracuru, Paraipaba – CE

Infection sites: Small intestine and large intestine.

References: Amorim et al. (Reference Amorim, Silva, Morais, Silva and Avila2017, Reference Amorim, Perez, Ávila and De Moura2019)

Aplectana pusilla Miranda, Reference Miranda1924

Hosts: Amphisbaena alba, Amphisbaena sp.

Locality: Bahia – BA

Infection site: Intestine.

References: Miranda (Reference Miranda1924); Travassos (Reference Travassos1931); Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993)

Aplectana unguiculata Rudolphi, 1919

Hosts: Amphisbaena alba, Amphisbaena sp.

Locality: Bahia – BA

Infection site: Intestine.

References: Miranda (Reference Miranda1924); Travassos (Reference Travassos1931); Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993)

Aplectana sp.

Hosts: Amphisbaena vermicularis (1), Diploglossus lessonae (2), Dryadosaura nordestina (3), Enyalius catenatus (4), Erythrolamprus viridis (5), Gymnodactylus darwinii (6), Anolis fuscoauratus (7)

Localities: (1) Palmares, São Lourenço da Mata – PE; (2, 4) Mata de Goiamunduba – PB; (3) Mata de Goiamunduba, RPPN Engenho Gargaú, REBIO Guaribas, Mata do Pau Ferro, Mata Sítio Socorro, Jardim Botânico Benjamim Maranhão – PB; (5) Várzea Alegre, Aiuaba – CE; (6) Jardim Botânico Benjamim Maranhão – PB; (7) RPPN Engenho Gargaú – PB

Infection sites: Lung, stomach, small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Oitaven et al. (Reference Oitaven, Barbosa de Moura, Ribeiro, Lisboa and Oliveira2021); (3) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Silva, Brito, Teles, Araujo-Filho, Franzini, Santana, Almeida and Mesquita2018a); (5) Quirino et al. (Reference Quirino, Ferreira, Silva, Silva, Morais and Ávila2018); (6) Silva et al. (Reference Silva, Teixeira, Teles, Araújo Filho, Mesquita and Almeida2018); (7, 2, 5, 4, 6) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020)

Remarks: Host A. fuscoauratus called Norops fuscauratus in Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020).

Larvae of Cosmocercidae

Hosts: Philodryas olfersii (1), Iguana iguana (2)

Localities: (1) Ilha Grande – PI; (2) Aiuaba, Barro, Crato, Juazeiro do Norte, Santana do Cariri – CE, Exu, Moreilândia – PE

Infection sites: Stomach, small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Castro Araújo et al. (Reference Castro Araújo, Silva, Machado, Oliveira and Ávila2020); (2) Teles et al. (Reference Teles, Brito, Teixeira, Ribeiro, Araujo-Filho, Lima, Pereira and Almeida2016)

Cosmocerca Diesing, 1816

Cosmocerca sp.

Host: Dryadosaura nordestina

Localities: Mata de Goiamunduba, RPPN Engenho Gargaú, REBIO Guaribas, Mata Sítio Socorro, Jardim Botânico Benjamim Maranhão – PB

Infection sites: Small intestine and large intestine.

References: Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Silva, Brito, Teles, Araujo-Filho, Franzini, Santana, Almeida and Mesquita2018a, Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020)

Oxyascaris Travassos, 1920

Oxyascaris sp.

Host: Leptodeira annulata

Locality: Aiuaba, Barro, Farias Brito, Jati, Mauriti – CE

Infection site: Large intestine.

Reference: Carvalho et al. (Reference Carvalho, Silva-Neta, Silva, Oliveira, Nunes, Souza and Ávila2018)

Paradollfusnema Baker, 1981

Paradollfusnema amphisbaenia Baker, 1981

Hosts: Leposternon microcephalum (1), Leposternon polystegum (2)

Localities: (1) Recife – PE; (2) Pinheiros – CE

Infection site: Large intestine.

References: (1) Ávila & Silva (Reference Ávila and Silva2010); (2) Amorim et al. (Reference Amorim, Oliveira, Silva and Ávila2014)

Raillietnema Travassos, 1927

Raillietnema spectans Gomes, 1964

Host: Leptodeira annulata

Localities: Aiuaba, Barro, Farias Brito, Jati, Mauriti – CE

Infection site: Large intestine.

Reference: Carvalho et al. (Reference Carvalho, Silva-Neta, Silva, Oliveira, Nunes, Souza and Ávila2018)

Family: Heterakidae Railliet & Henry, 1912

Moaciria Freitas, 1956

Moaciria alvarengai Freitas, 1956

Host: Trachylepis atlântica (1, 2)

Locality: (1, 2) Fernando de Noronha – PE

Infection site: Large intestine.

References: (1) Bursey et al. (Reference Bursey, Rocha, Menezes, Ariani and Vrcibradic2010); (2) Ramalho et al. (Reference Ramalho, da Silva, Schwartz and Péres2009)

Spinicauda Travassos, 1920

Spinicauda spinicauda Olfers, 1819; (= Heterakis turgida, Schneider 1866; = Heterakis campanula, Linstow 1899; = Spinicauda amarali, Pereira, Reference Pereira1935).

Hosts: Trachylepis atlântica (1, 2), Tupinambis teguixin (3), Salvator merianae (1, 2, 4)

Localities: (1, 2) Fernando de Noronha – PE; (3) Fortaleza – CE; (4) Aiuaba, Antonina do Norte, Barro, Farias Brito, Juazeiro do Norte, Várzea Alegre – CE, Serrita, Exu – PE

Infection sites: Oesophagus, stomach, small intestine, large intestine and caecum.

References: (1) Bursey et al. (Reference Bursey, Rocha, Menezes, Ariani and Vrcibradic2010); (2) Ramalho et al. (Reference Ramalho, da Silva, Schwartz and Péres2009); (3) Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993); (4) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Brito, Teles, Ribeiro, Araujo-Filho, Lima, Pereira and Almeida2016)

Strongyluris Müller, 1894

Strongyluris oscari Travassos, 1923

Hosts: Ameivula ocellifera (1, 2), Copeoglossum arajara (3), Dactyloa punctata (4), Gymnodactylus geckoides (2, 5), Lygodactylus klugei (2), Anolis fuscoauratus (4), Tropidurus hispidus (1, 2, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 13), Tropidurus jaguaribanus (8), Tropidurus semitaeniatus (2, 7, 10, 14), Tropidurus torquatus (15, 16, 17), Strobilurus torquatus (4, 18)

Localities: (1) ESEC Aiuaba, Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN; (2) Alto Sertão – SE; (3) Chapada do Araripe, Barbalha, Crato – CE; (4) RPPN Engenho Gargaú – PB; (5) ESEC Aiuaba, Várzea Alegre – CE; (6) Chapada do Araripe – CE; (7) Piauí – PI, Ceará – CE; (8) ESEC Aiuaba – CE; (9) Fazenda Experimental Vale do Curu – CE; (10) Parque Nacional Chapada Diamantina – BA; (11) Cabaceiras – PB, Barra do Cunhaú – RN; (13) REBIO Guaribas – PB; (14) Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN; (15) Umbuzeiro – PB; (16) Fortaleza – CE; (17) Salvador – BA, Fortaleza – CE; (18) Parque Nacional Serra de Itabaiana – SE

Infection sites: Lung, oesophagus, stomach, small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1, 14) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Ferreira, Ribeiro, Anjos, Almeida, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014a, Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellosb); (2) Araújo Filho et al. (Reference Araújo Filho, Teixeira, Teles, Rocha, Almeida, Mesquita and Lacerda2020); (3) Cabral et al. (Reference Cabral, Teles, Brito, Almeida, Dos Anjos, Guarnieri and Ribeiro2018); (4, 13) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020); (5) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014b); (6) Anjos et al. (Reference Anjos, Ávila, Ribeiro, Almeida and da Silva2012); (7) Ávila et al. (Reference Ávila, Anjos, Ribeiro, Morais, da Silva and Almeida2012); (8) Alcantara et al. (Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Sousa, Ávila and Morais2018a), (9) Galdino et al. (Reference Galdino, Ávila, Bezerra, Passos, Melo and Zanchi-Silva2014); (10) Maia-Carneiro et al. (Reference Maia-Carneiro, Motta-Tavares, Ávila and Rocha2018); (11) Araujo Filho et al. (Reference Araujo Filho, Brito, Lima, Pereira, Mesquita, Albuquerque and Almeida2017); (15) Pereira (Reference Pereira1935); (16) Konh et al. (Reference Kohn, Pinto and Fernandes1973); (17) Vicente (Reference Vicente1978), Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993); (18) Silva et al. (Reference Silva, Xavier, dos Santos Carvalho, dos Anjos, Machado and dos Reis Dias2021)

Remarks: Host C. arajara reported in Cabral et al. (Reference Cabral, Teles, Brito, Almeida, Dos Anjos, Guarnieri and Ribeiro2018) as Mabuya arajara. Host A. fuscoauratus called Norops fuscoauratus in Araújo Filho et al. (Reference Araújo Filho, Teixeira, Teles, Rocha, Almeida, Mesquita and Lacerda2020).

Family: Kathlaniidae Travassos, 1918

Cruzia Travassos, 1917

Cruzia sp.

Hosts: Ameiva ameiva (1), Ameivula ocellifera (2); Ameivula pyrrhogularis (3), Salvator merianae (4)

Localities: (1) ESEC Aiuaba, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN; (2) ESEC Aiuaba, Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN; (3) ESEC Aiuaba, Cuncas, Dom Quintino, Quitaiús – CE; (4) Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre - CE

Infection site: Not specified.

References: (1, 2, 4) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014b); (3) Silva et al. (Reference Silva, Manoel, Uieda, Avila and Silva2019b)

Cruzia travassosi Khalili & Vogelsang, 1932

Host: Salvator merianae

Localities: Aiuaba, Antonina do Norte, Barro, Farias Brito, Juazeiro do Norte, Várzea Alegre – CE, Serrita, Exu – PE

Infection site: Intestine.

Reference: Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Brito, Teles, Ribeiro, Araujo-Filho, Lima, Pereira and Almeida2016)

Tonaudia Travassos, 1918

Tonaudia freitasi Vicente & Santos, 1968

Host: Chelonia mydas

Locality: Aracati – CE

Infection sites: Stomach and intestine.

References: Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993); Muniz-Pereira et al. (Reference Muniz-Pereira, Vieira and Luque2009)

Family: Seuratidae Hall, 1910

Skrjabinellazia Sypliaxov, 1930

Skrjabinellazia intermedia Freitas, 1940

Hosts: Ameivula nativo (1); Dactyloa punctata (2), Hemidactylus agrius (3), Hemidactylus brasilianus (3), Anolis fuscoauratus (4), Phyllopezus pollicaris (3), Tropidurus torquatus (5)

Localities: (1) Guaratiba – BA; (2) REBIO Guaribas – PB; (3) ESEC Aiuaba – CE; (4) RPPN Engenho Gargaú – PB; (5) Salvador – BA

Infection sites: Stomach, small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Menezes et al. (Reference Menezes, Vrcibradic, Vicente, Dutra and Rocha2004): (2, 4) Teixeira et al.(Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020); (3) Lima et al. (Reference Lima, Brito, Araújo, Teles, Ribeiro, Teixeira, Pereira and Almeida2017); (5) Vicente (Reference Vicente1978), Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993)

Remarks: Host A. fuscoauratus called Norops fuscoauratus in Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020).

Skrjabinellazia sp.

Hosts: Hemidactylus agrius (1), Anolis brasiliensis (2), Anolis fuscoauratus (3)

Localities: (1) Fazenda Experimental Vale do Curu – CE; (2) Crato – CE; (3) Serra de Maranguape, Serra de Baturité, Parque Nacional Ubajara – CE

Infection site: Small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Anjos et al. (Reference Anjos, Holanda Bezerra, Cunha Passos, Zanchi and Barbosa Galdino2011); (2) Amorim & Ávila (Reference Amorim and Ávila2019); (3) Mesquita et al. (Reference Mesquita, Oliveira, Perez and Ávila2020)

Remarks: Hosts A. brasiliensis and A. fuscoauratus called Norops brasiliensis and N. fuscoauratus in Amorim & Ávila (Reference Amorim and Ávila2019) and Mesquita et al. (Reference Mesquita, Oliveira, Perez and Ávila2020), respectively.

Family: Subuluridae Travassos, 1914

Subulura Molin, 1860

Subulura lacertilia Vicente, Van Sluys, Fontes & Kiefer, 2000

Host: Ameivula nativo

Locality: Guaratiba – BA

Site of infection: Small intestine.

Reference: Menezes et al. (Reference Menezes, Vrcibradic, Vicente, Dutra and Rocha2004)

Subulura sp.

Host: Iguana iguana

Localities: Aiuaba, Barro, Crato, Juazeiro do Norte, Santana do Cariri – CE, Exu, Moreilândia – PE

Infection site: Small intestine and large intestine.

Reference: Teles et al. (Reference Teles, Brito, Teixeira, Ribeiro, Araujo-Filho, Lima, Pereira and Almeida2016)

Order: Spirurida Chitwood, 1933

Family: Camallanidae Railliet & Henry, 1915

Serpinema Yeh, 1960

Serpinema monospiculatus Freitas & Dobbin Junior, 1962

Hosts: Mesoclemmys tuberculata (1, 2), Phrynops geoffroanus (3, 4)

Localities: (1) Jaboatão – PE; (2) Carius – CE; (3) Cortês – PE; (4) Capibaribe – PE

Infection sites: Lung, body cavity, stomach, small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1, 3) Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993); (2) Pereira et al. (Reference Pereira, Brito, De Araújo, Teixeira, Teles, Santana, Lima and Almeida2018); (4) Fonseca et al. (Reference Fonseca, Rojas, Vieira, dos Santos Ferreira, Da Silva Rodrigues, De Barros, Júnior, Moura and de Oliveira2021)

Serpinema magathi Sprehn, 1932

Host: Kinosternon scorpioides (1, 2)

Localities: (1) Barra do Cordeiro, Açude São João da Várzea, Recife, São Lourenço da Mata – PE; (2) São Bento – MA

Infection sites: Stomach, small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993); (2) Viana et al. (Reference Viana, Rodrigues, Madelaire, Clara, Santos and Sousa2016)

Family: Diplotriaenidae Anderson, 1958

Hastospiculum Skrjabin, 1923

Hastospiculum onchocercum Chitwood, 1932

Host: Lachesis muta

Locality: RPPN Pedra Dantas – PE

Infection site: Coelomic cavity.

Reference: Araujo-Filho et al. (Reference Araujo-Filho, Oliveira, Ávila, Roberto and Almeida2013)

Hastospiculum nordestinum Ferreira-Silva, Alcantara, Ávila & Silva, 2020

Host: Xenodon merremii

Locality: Barbalha – CE

Infection site: Body cavity.

Reference: Ferreira et al. (Reference Ferreira, Alcantara, Avila and Silva2020b)

Family: Gnathostomatidae Railliet, 1895

Spiroxys Schneider, 1866

Spiroxys figueiredoi Freitas & Dobbin Junior, 1962

Hosts: Kinosternon scorpioides (1, 2), Mesoclemmys tuberculata (3), Phrynops geoffroanus (3, 4),

Localities: (1) Açude São João da Várzea, Recife – PE; (2) São Bento – MA; (3) Carius – CE; (4) Capibaribe – PE

Infection sites: Stomach, small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993); (2) Viana et al. (Reference Viana, Rodrigues, Madelaire, Clara, Santos and Sousa2016); (3) Pereira et al. (Reference Pereira, Brito, De Araújo, Teixeira, Teles, Santana, Lima and Almeida2018); (4) Fonseca et al. (Reference Fonseca, Rojas, Vieira, dos Santos Ferreira, Da Silva Rodrigues, De Barros, Júnior, Moura and de Oliveira2021)

Family: Onchocercidae Leiper, 1911

Onchocercidae undetermined

Host: Anolis brasiliensis

Locality: Crato – CE

Infection site: Stomach.

Reference: Amorim & Ávila (Reference Amorim and Ávila2019)

Remarks: Called Norops brasiliensis in this paper.

Oswaldofilaria Travassos, 1933

Oswaldofilaria brevicaudata Rhodain & Vuylsteke, 1937

Host: Iguana iguana

Locality: Exu – PE

Infection sites: Dorsal region of the peritoneum and hind legs, and general cavity.

References: Bain (Reference Bain1974); Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993)

Oswaldofilaria petersi Bain & Sulahian, 1974

Hosts: Salvator merianae (1), Tropidurus hispidus (2)

Localities: (1) Aiuaba, Antonina do Norte, Barro, Farias Brito, Juazeiro do Norte, Várzea Alegre – CE, Serrita; (2) Ibiraba – BA

Infection sites: Right ileo-fibular muscle and intestine.

References: (1) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teles, Brito, Teixeira, Ribeiro, Araujo-Filho, Lima, Pereira and Almeida2016); (2) Silva & Kohlsdorf (Reference Silva and Kohlsdorf2003)

Oswaldofilaria sp.

Hosts: Ameivula pyrhogularis (1), Tropidurus hispidus (2, 3)

Localities: (1) ESEC Aiuaba, Cuncas, Dom Quintino, Quitaiús – CE; (2) Fazenda Experimental Vale do Curu – CE; (3) ESEC Aiuaba, Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN

Infection site: Body cavity.

References: (1) Silva et al. (Reference Silva, Manoel, Uieda, Avila and Silva2019b); (2) Galdino et al. (Reference Galdino, Ávila, Bezerra, Passos, Melo and Zanchi-Silva2014); (3) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Ferreira, Ribeiro, Anjos, Almeida, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014a, Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellosb)

Piratuba Freitas & Lent, 1947

Piratuba digiticauda Lent & Freitas, 1941

Hosts: Tropidurus hispidus (1), Tropidurus torquatus (2)

Localities: (1) Parque Nacional Chapada Diamantina – BA; (2) Salvador – BA

Infection sites: Coelom, large intestine and abdominal cavity.

References: (1) Maia-Carneiro et al. (Reference Maia-Carneiro, Motta-Tavares, Ávila and Rocha2018); (2) Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993)

Piratuba sp.

Hosts: Acratosaura mentalis (1), Ameivula ocellifera (1), Gymnodactylus geckoides (1, 2), Iguana iguana (3), Kentropyx calcarata (4), Lygodactylus klugei (1), Tropidurus hispidus (5), Tropidurus semitaeniatus (1)

Localities: (1) Alto Sertão – SE; (2) ESEC Aiuaba – CE; (3) Aiuaba, Barro, Crato, Juazeiro do Norte, Santana do Cariri – CE, Exu, Moreilândia – PE; (4) Mata Sítio Socorro – PB; (5) Cabaceiras, João Pessoa – PB, Barra do Cunhaú – RN

Infection sites: Body cavity, small intestine, large intestine and ovary.

References: (1) Araújo Filho et al. (Reference Araújo Filho, Teixeira, Teles, Rocha, Almeida, Mesquita and Lacerda2020); (2) Lima et al. (Reference Lima, Brito, Araújo, Teles, Ribeiro, Teixeira, Pereira and Almeida2017); (3) Teles et al. (Reference Teles, Brito, Teixeira, Ribeiro, Araujo-Filho, Lima, Pereira and Almeida2016); (4) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020); (5) Araujo Filho et al. (Reference Araujo Filho, Brito, Lima, Pereira, Mesquita, Albuquerque and Almeida2017)

Family: Physalopteridae Railliet, 1893

Larva of Physalopteridae

Hosts: Ameivula ocellifera (1), Hemidactylus agrius (2), Lygodactylus klugei (2)

Localities: (1) Ceará – CE; (2) Fazenda Experimental Vale do Curu – CE

Infection site: Stomach.

References: (1) Ávila et al. (Reference Ávila, Anjos, Ribeiro, Morais, da Silva and Almeida2012); (2) Anjos et al. (Reference Anjos, Holanda Bezerra, Cunha Passos, Zanchi and Barbosa Galdino2011)

Remarks: Host Ameivulla ocellifera reported in Ávila et al. (Reference Ávila, Anjos, Ribeiro, Morais, da Silva and Almeida2012) as Cnemidophorus ocellifer.

Physaloptera Rudolphi, 1819

Larva of Physaloptera sp.

Hosts: Gymnodactylus darwinii (1), Gymnodactylus geckoides (2), Anolis fuscoauratus (3), Tropidurus hispidus (4), Tropidurus semitaeniatus (4)

Localities: (1) Mata do Camucim, Mata do Tapacurá, São Lourenço da Mata – PE; (2) ESEC Aiuaba, Cuncas – CE; (3) Serra de Maranguape, Serra de Baturité, Parque Nacional Ubajara – CE; (4) Ceará – CE, Piauí – PE

Infection sites: Stomach and large intestine.

References: (1) Oitaven et al. (Reference Oitaven, da Silva Ribeiro, de Moura and de Oliveira2019); (2) Alcantara et al. (Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Gonçalves-Sousa, Morais and Ávila2019); (3) Mesquita et al. (Reference Mesquita, Oliveira, Perez and Ávila2020); (4) Ávila et al. (Reference Ávila, Anjos, Ribeiro, Morais, da Silva and Almeida2012)

Remarks: Host A. fuscoauratus called Norops fuscoauratus in Mesquita et al. (Reference Mesquita, Oliveira, Perez and Ávila2020).

Physaloptera liophis Vicente & Santos, 1974

Hosts: Erythrolamprus viridis

Localities: Várzea Alegre, Aiuaba – CE

Infection site: Stomach.

Reference: Quirino et al. (Reference Quirino, Ferreira, Silva, Silva, Morais and Ávila2018)

Physaloptera lutzi Cristofaro, Guimarães & Rodrigues, 1976

Hosts: Ameiva ameiva (1, 2, 3, 4), Ameivula ocellifera (4, 5), Coleodactylus meridionalis (10), Dactyloa punctata (11), Dryadosaura nordestina (14), Eurolophosaurus amathites (16), Eurolophosaurus divaricatus (16), Hemidactylus agrius (12, 13), Hemidactylus brasilianus (13), Glaucomastix abaetensis (6), Gymnodactylus geckoides (4, 13, 15), Kentropyx calcarata (7), Lygodactylus klugei (4, 13), Micrablepharus maximiliani (8), Anolis ortonii (10), Phyllopezus pollicaris (13), Salvator merianae (8, 9), Strobilurus torquatus (17), Tropidurus hispidus (4, 5, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22), Tropidurus hygomi (23), Tropidurus jaguaribanus (24), Tropidurus psammonastes (16), Tropidurus semitaeniatus (4, 25), Tropidurus torquatus (26), Vanzosaura multiscutata (4)

Localities: (1) Salvador – BA; (2, 26) Salvador, Serrinha, Canudos – BA; (3) ESEC Aiuaba, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN; (4) Alto Sertão – SE; (5) ESEC Aiuaba, Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN; (6) Dunas do Abaeté – BA; (7) RPPN Engenho Gargaú, Santa Rita, Jardim Botânico Benjamim Maranhão – PB; (8) Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE; (9) Aiuaba, Antonina do Norte, Barro, Farias Brito, Juazeiro do Norte, Várzea Alegre – CE, Serrita, Exu – PE; (10) Mata de Goiamunduba – PB; (11) RPPN Engenho Gargaú – PB; (12) ESEC Aiuaba, Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE; (13, 24) ESEC Aiuaba; (14) Mata de Goiamunduba, RPPN Engenho Gargaú, Jardim Botânico Benjamim Maranhão – PB; (15) ESEC Aiuaba, Várzea Alegre – CE; (16) Xique-xique – BA; (17) RPPN Engenho Gargaú, Jardim Botânico Benjamim Maranhão – PB; (18) Chapada do Araripe – CE; (19) Ceará – CE, Piauí – PI; (20) Fazenda Experimental Vale do Curu – CE; (21) Cabaceiras – PB, Barra do Cunhaú – RN; (22) Parque Nacional Chapada Diamantina – BA; (23) Salvador – BA; Aracajú – SE; (25) Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN; (26) Vicente (Reference Vicente1978), Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993); Ávila & Silva (Reference Ávila and Silva2010)

Infection sites: Lung, stomach, small intestine, large intestine, gonads, coelomic cavity and cavity.

References: (1) Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993); (2) Ávila & Silva (Reference Ávila and Silva2010); (3, 8, 12, 15) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014b), (4) Araújo Filho et al. (Reference Araújo Filho, Teixeira, Teles, Rocha, Almeida, Mesquita and Lacerda2020); (5) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Ferreira, Ribeiro, Anjos, Almeida, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014a, Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellosb); (6) Dias et al. (Reference Dias, Vrcibradic and Rocha2005); (7) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Franzini, Brito, Almeida and Mesquita2018b); (9) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Brito, Teles, Ribeiro, Araujo-Filho, Lima, Pereira and Almeida2016); (10) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020, Reference Teixeira, Sampaio, Araujo-Filho, Teles, Almeida, Mesquita and Brito2021); (11, 17) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020); (13) Lima et al. (Reference Lima, Brito, Araújo, Teles, Ribeiro, Teixeira, Pereira and Almeida2017); (14) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Silva, Brito, Teles, Araujo-Filho, Franzini, Santana, Almeida and Mesquita2018a, Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020); (16, 23) Lambertz et al. (Reference Lambertz, Kohlsdorf, Perry, Ávila and da Silva2012); (18) Anjos et al. (Reference Anjos, Ávila, Ribeiro, Almeida and da Silva2012); (19) Ávila et al. (Reference Ávila, Anjos, Ribeiro, Morais, da Silva and Almeida2012); (20) Galdino et al. (Reference Galdino, Ávila, Bezerra, Passos, Melo and Zanchi-Silva2014); (21) Araujo Filho et al. (Reference Araujo Filho, Brito, Lima, Pereira, Mesquita, Albuquerque and Almeida2017); (22) Maia-Carneiro et al. (Reference Maia-Carneiro, Motta-Tavares, Ávila and Rocha2018); (24) Oliveira et al. (Reference Oliveira, Duarte, Araújo Filho and Almeida2020)

Remarks: Host A. ortonii called Norops ortonii in Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020, Reference Teixeira, Sampaio, Araujo-Filho, Teles, Almeida, Mesquita and Brito2021). Host G. abaetensis reported in Dias et al. (Reference Dias, Vrcibradic and Rocha2005) as C. abaetensis.

Physaloptera nordestina Matias, Morais & Ávila, 2020

Hosts: Oxybelis aeneus, Pseudoboa nigra, Xenodon merremii

Localities: Crato, Farias Brito, Icó, Nova Olinda – CE, Ouricuri – PE, Ceará-Mirim – RN

Infection site: Stomach.

Reference: Matias et al. (Reference Matias, Morais and Avila2020)

Physaloptera retusa Rudolphi, 1819

Hosts: Ameivula nativo (1), Ameivula ocellifera (2), Copeoglossum nigropunctatum (3), Enyalius bibronii (5),

Glaucomastix abaetensis (4), Hemidactylus mabouia (6, 7), Kentropyx calcarata (8), Mesoclemmys tuberculata (9), Anolis brasiliensis (10), Phyllopezus pollicaris (6), Phrynops geoffroanus (11), Polychrus acutirostris (12), Salvator merianae (2), Tropidurus hispidus (2, 13, 14, 15, 16), Tropidurus semitaeniatus (2), Tropidurus torquatus (17), Strobilurus torquatus (18)

Localities: (1) Guaratiba – BA; (2) Alto Sertão – SE; (4) Dunas do Abaeté – BA; (3, 8) Mata Sítio Socorro – PB; (5) Mata do Pau Ferro – PB; (6) Crato – CE; (7) Paulino Neves – MA, Acaraú, Taíba São Gonçalo, Fortaleza, Icapuí – CE; (9, 11) Cariús – CE; (10) Grangeiro – CE; (12) Várzea Alegre – CE, Exu – PE; (13) Chapada do Araripe – CE; (14) Ceará – CE, Piauí – PI; (15) Parque Nacional Chapada Diamantina – BA; (16) REBIO Guaribas, Mata do Pau Ferro – PB; (17) Salvador – BA; (18) Parque Nacional Serra de Itabaiana – SE

Infection sites: Cavity, lung, stomach, small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Menezes et al. (Reference Menezes, Vrcibradic, Vicente, Dutra and Rocha2004); (2) Araújo Filho et al. (Reference Araújo Filho, Teixeira, Teles, Rocha, Almeida, Mesquita and Lacerda2020); (3, 8, 5, 16) Teixeira et al., Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020); (4) Dias et al. (Reference Dias, Vrcibradic and Rocha2005); (6) Sousa et al. (Reference Sousa, Brito, Ávila, Teles, Araujo-Filho, Teixeira, Anjos and Almeida2014); (7) Bezerra et al. (Reference Bezerra, Pinheiro, Melo, Braga, Anjos and Borges-Nojosa2020); (9, 11) Pereira et al. (Reference Pereira, Brito, De Araújo, Teixeira, Teles, Santana, Lima and Almeida2018); (10) Amorim & Ávila (Reference Amorim and Ávila2019); (12) Araujo Filho et al. (Reference Araujo Filho, Ribeiro, Brito, Teles, Sousa, Ávila and Almeida2014); (13) Anjos et al. (Reference Anjos, Ávila, Ribeiro, Almeida and da Silva2012); (14) Ávila et al. (Reference Ávila, Anjos, Ribeiro, Morais, da Silva and Almeida2012); (15) Maia-Carneiro et al. (Reference Maia-Carneiro, Motta-Tavares, Ávila and Rocha2018); (17) Vicente (Reference Vicente1978), Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993); (18) Silva et al. (Reference Silva, Xavier, dos Santos Carvalho, dos Anjos, Machado and dos Reis Dias2021)

Remarks: Host A. brasiliensis called Norops brasiliensis in Amorim & Ávila (Reference Amorim and Ávila2019). Host G. abaetensis reported in Dias et al. (Reference Dias, Vrcibradic and Rocha2005) as C. abaetensis.

Physaloptera sp.

Hosts: Ameivula ocellifera (1), Ameivula nigrigula (2), Ameivula pyrrhogularis (3), Amphisbaena vermicularis (4), Bothrops erythromelas (5), Brasiliscincus agilis (6), Colobosauroides cearensis (7), Copeoglossum arajara (8), Glaucomastix abaetensis (1), Iguana iguana (9), Leptodeira annulata (10), Micrurus ibiboboca (11), Nothobachia ablephara (12), Oxyrhopus trigeminus (13),Philodryas nattereri (14), Philodryas olfersii (15), Pseudoboa nigra (16), Tropidurus jaguaribanus (17), Tropidurus semitaeniatus (18)

Localities: (1) Dunas do Abaeté – BA; (2) Serra de Santo Inácio – BA, Pirambu – SE; (3) ESEC Aiuaba, Cuncas, Dom Quintino, Quitaiús – CE; (4, 5) Colonia – PE; (6) Abrolhos – BA; (7) Mauriti – CE; (8) Chapada do Araripe, Barbalha, Crato – CE; (9) Aiuaba, Barro, Crato, Juazeiro do Norte, Santana do Cariri – CE, Exu, Morielândia – PE; (10) Aiuaba, Barro, Farias Brito, Jati, Mauriti – CE; (11, 14) Farias Brito – CE; (12) Petrolina – PE; (13) Exu – PE; (15) Ilha Grande – PI; (16) Ceará – CE, Pernambuco – PE, Rio Grande do Norte – RN; (17) ESEC Aiuaba – CE; (18) Parque Nacional Chapada Diamantina – BA

Infection sites: Coelomic cavity, stomach, small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Dias et al. (Reference Dias, Vrcibradic and Rocha2005); (2) Xavier et al. (Reference Xavier, Anjos, Gazêta, Machado, Storti-Melo and Dias2019); (3) Silva et al. (Reference Silva, Manoel, Uieda, Avila and Silva2019b); (4) Silva et al. (Reference Silva, Pinto, Oliveira, Teles, Araújo Filho, Pereira and Almeida2017); (5) Oliveira et al. (Reference Oliveira, Lima, Teles, Araújo Filho and Almeida2018b); (6) Rocha & Vrcibradic (Reference Rocha and Vrcibradic2003); (7) Silva Neta & Ávila (Reference Silva Neta and Ávila2018); (8) Cabral et al. (Reference Cabral, Teles, Brito, Almeida, Dos Anjos, Guarnieri and Ribeiro2018); (9) Teles et al. (Reference Teles, Brito, Teixeira, Ribeiro, Araujo-Filho, Lima, Pereira and Almeida2016); (10) Carvalho et al. (Reference Carvalho, Silva-Neta, Silva, Oliveira, Nunes, Souza and Ávila2018); (11) Oliveira et al. (Reference Oliveira, Lima, Teles and Almeida2018a); (12) Ribeiro et al. (Reference Ribeiro, Ferreira, Silva, Vieira and Moura2018); (13) Oliveira et al. (Reference Oliveira, Araújo Filho and Almeida2019a); (14) Oliveira et al. (Reference Oliveira, Lima, Pinto, Silva, Teles, Silva and Almeida2019b); (15) Castro Araújo et al. (Reference Castro Araújo, Silva, Machado, Oliveira and Ávila2020); (16) Matias et al. (Reference Matias, Silva, Sousa and Ávila2018); (17) Alcantara et al. (Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Sousa, Ávila and Morais2018a); (18) Maia-Carneiro et al. (Reference Maia-Carneiro, Motta-Tavares, Ávila and Rocha2018)

Remarks: Host C. arajara reported in Cabral et al. (Reference Cabral, Teles, Brito, Almeida, Dos Anjos, Guarnieri and Ribeiro2018) as M. arajara. Hosts A. ocellifera and G. abaetensis are reported in Dias et al. (Reference Dias, Vrcibradic and Rocha2005) as C. ocellifer and C. abaetensis, respectively.

Physaloptera tupinambae Pereira, Alves Rocha, Lima & Luque, 2012

Host: Salvator merianae

Localities: Jardim, Aracajú, Areia Branca, Capela, Poço Redondo, São Cristóvão – SE

Infection site: Stomach.

Reference: Melo et al. (Reference Melo, Oliveira, Faria and Moura2019)

Physalopteroides Wu & Liu, 1940

Physalopteroides venancioi Lent, Freitas & Proença, 1946

Hosts: Ameivula nativo (1), Ameivula pyrrhogularis (2), Copeoglossum arajara (3), Hemidactylus mabouia (4), Philodryas olfersii (5), Pseudoboa nigra (6), Psychosaura macrorhyncha (7), Tropidurus hispidus (8, 9, 10)

Localities: (1) Guaratiba – BA; (2) ESEC Aiuaba, Cuncas, Dom Quintino, Quitaiús – CE; (3) Chapada do Araripe, Barbalha, Crato – CE; (4) Crato – CE; (5) Ilha Grande – PI; (6) Ceará – CE; (7) Trancoso – BA; (8) Chapada do Araripe – CE; (9) Ceará – CE, Piauí – PI; (10) Parque Nacional Chapada Diamantina

Infection sites: Stomach and small intestine.

References: (1) Menezes et al. (Reference Menezes, Vrcibradic, Vicente, Dutra and Rocha2004); (2) Silva et al. (Reference Silva, Manoel, Uieda, Avila and Silva2019b); (3) Cabral et al. (Reference Cabral, Teles, Brito, Almeida, Dos Anjos, Guarnieri and Ribeiro2018); (4) Sousa et al. (Reference Sousa, Brito, Ávila, Teles, Araujo-Filho, Teixeira, Anjos and Almeida2014) & Ávila et al. (Reference Ávila, Anjos, Ribeiro, Morais, da Silva and Almeida2012); (5) Castro Araújo et al. (Reference Castro Araújo, Silva, Machado, Oliveira and Ávila2020); (6) Matias et al. (Reference Matias, Silva, Sousa and Ávila2018); (7) Ávila et al. (Reference Ávila, Anjos, Ribeiro, Morais, da Silva and Almeida2012); (7) Vrcibradic et al. (Reference Vrcibradic, Rocha and Van Sluys2001), (7) Rocha & Vrcibradic (Reference Rocha and Vrcibradic2003); (8) Anjos et al. (Reference Anjos, Ávila, Ribeiro, Almeida and da Silva2012); (9) Ávila et al. (Reference Ávila, Anjos, Ribeiro, Morais, da Silva and Almeida2012); (10) Maia-Carneiro et al. (Reference Maia-Carneiro, Motta-Tavares, Ávila and Rocha2018)

Remarks: Host C. arajara reported in Cabral et al. (Reference Cabral, Teles, Brito, Almeida, Dos Anjos, Guarnieri and Ribeiro2018) as M. arajara. Host P. macrorhyncha reported in Vrcibradic et al. (Reference Vrcibradic, Rocha and Van Sluys2001) and Rocha & Vrcibradic (Reference Rocha and Vrcibradic2003) as M. macrorhyncha.

Family: Rhabdochonidae Travassos, Artigas & Pereira, 1928

Trichospirura Smith & Chitwood, 1967

Trichospirura sp.

Hosts: Gymnodactylus geckoides (1), Hemidactylus agrius (1), Hemidactylus brasilianus (1), Phyllopezus pollicaris (1, 2), Tropidurus semitaeniatus (2)

Localities: (1) ESEC Aiuaba – CE; (2) Alto Sertão – SE

Infection site: Gallbladder.

References: (1) Lima et al. (Reference Lima, Brito, Araújo, Teles, Ribeiro, Teixeira, Pereira and Almeida2017); (2) Araújo Filho et al. (Reference Araújo Filho, Teixeira, Teles, Rocha, Almeida, Mesquita and Lacerda2020)

Order: Strongylida Chitwood, 1937

Family: Diaphanocephalidae Travassos, 1920

Diaphanocephalus Diesing, 1851

Diaphanocephalus galeatus Rudolphi, 1819

Host: Salvator merianae (1, 2, 3)

Localities: (1) Fernando de Noronha – PE; (2) Aiuaba, Antonina do Norte, Barro, Farias Brito, Juazeiro do Norte, Várzea Alegre – CE, Serrita, Exu – PE; (3) Jardim, Aracaju, Areia Branca, Capela, Poço Redondo, São Cristóvão – SE

Infection sites: Stomach, small intestine, large intestine and caecum.

References: (1) Ramalho et al. (Reference Ramalho, da Silva, Schwartz and Péres2009); (2) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Brito, Teles, Ribeiro, Araujo-Filho, Lima, Pereira and Almeida2016); (3) Melo et al. (Reference Melo, Oliveira, Faria and Moura2019)

Kalicephalus Molin, 1861

Kalicephalus costatus Rudolphi, 1819

Host: Philodryas olfersii

Locality: Ilha Grande – PI

Infection site: Small intestine.

Reference: Castro Araújo et al. (Reference Castro Araújo, Silva, Machado, Oliveira and Ávila2020)

Family: Molineidae Durette-Desset & Chabaud, 1981

Oswaldocruzia Travassos, 1917

Oswaldocruzia bainae Bem Slimane & Durette-Desset, 1996

Host: Anolis brasiliensis

Locality: Crato – CE

Infection site: Small intestine.

Reference: Amorim & Ávila (Reference Amorim and Ávila2019)

Remarks: Called Norops brasiliensis in this paper.

Oswaldocruzia brasiliensis Lent & Freitas, 1935

Host: Anotosaura vanzolinia

Localities: São José da Mata, Parque Florestal Complexo Aluízio Campos - PB

Infection sites: Lung and gastrointestinal tract.

Reference: Oliveira et al. (Reference Oliveira, Teixeira, Queiroz, Araujo-Filho, Teles, Brito and Mesquita2017)

Oswaldocruzia sp.

Hosts: Brasiliscincus heathi (1), Colobosauroides cearensis (2), Leptodeira annulata (3), Tropidurus hispidus (4)

Localities: (1) ESEC Aiuaba, Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE; (2) Mauriti – CE; (3) Aiuaba, Barro, Farias Brito, Jati, Mauriti – CE; (4) Fazenda Experimental do Vale do Curu – CE

Infection site: Small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014b); (2) Silva Neta & Ávila (Reference Silva Neta and Ávila2018); (3) Carvalho et al. (Reference Carvalho, Silva-Neta, Silva, Oliveira, Nunes, Souza and Ávila2018); (4) Galdino et al. (Reference Galdino, Ávila, Bezerra, Passos, Melo and Zanchi-Silva2014)

Oswaldocruzia subauricularis Rudolphi, 1819

Host: Tropidurus hispidus

Localities: Cabaceiras – PB, Barra do Cunhaú – RN

Infection site: Stomach.

Reference: Araujo Filho et al. (Reference Araujo Filho, Brito, Lima, Pereira, Mesquita, Albuquerque and Almeida2017)

Order: Oxyurida Railliet, 1916

Family: Pharyngodonidae Travassos, 1919

Alaeuris Thapar, 1925

Alaeuris caudatus Lent & Freitas, 1948

Host: Iguana iguana (1, 2)

Localities: (1) Exu – PE; (2) Aiuaba, Barro, Crato, Juazeiro do Norte, Santana do Cariri – CE, Exu, Moreilândia – PE

Infection site: Small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993); (2) Teles et al. (Reference Teles, Brito, Teixeira, Ribeiro, Araujo-Filho, Lima, Pereira and Almeida2016)

Alaeuris sp.

Host: Iguana iguana (1, 2)

Localities: (1) Santa Quitéria – CE, João Camara – RN; (2) Aiuaba, Barro, Crato, Juazeiro do Norte, Santana do Cariri – CE, Exu, Moreilândia – PE

Infection site: Small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014b); Teles et al. (Reference Teles, Brito, Teixeira, Ribeiro, Araujo-Filho, Lima, Pereira and Almeida2016)

Alaeuris vogelsangi Lent & Freitas, 1948

Host: Iguana iguana (1, 2, 3, 4)

Localities: (1) Exu – PE; (2) Maranhão – MA, Alagoas – AL; (3) Aiuaba, Barro, Crato, Juazeiro do Norte, Santana do Cariri – CE, Exu, Moreilândia – PE; (4) Crato, Barbalha, Juazeiro do Norte, Nova Olinda, Iguatu – CE

Infection sites: Oesophagus, small intestine, caecum, colon and rectum.

References: (1) Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993); (2) Breves et al. (Reference Breves, Porto, Pissinatti, Luz and Menezes2011); (3) Teles et al. (Reference Teles, Brito, Teixeira, Ribeiro, Araujo-Filho, Lima, Pereira and Almeida2016); (4) Lopes et al. (Reference Lopes, Silva, Datas and Almeida2007)

Ozolaimus Dujardin, 1945

Ozolaimus cirratus Linstow, 1906

Host: Iguana iguana (1, 2, 3, 4)

Localities: (1) Santa Luzia – PB; (2) Alagoas – AL, Maranhão – MA; (3) Santa Quitéria – CE, João Camara – RN; (4) Aiuaba, Crato, Juazeiro do Norte, Santana do Cariri – CE, Exu, Moreilândia – PE; (5) Teresina – PI

Infection sites: Small intestine, large intestine, caecum and colon.

References: (1) Pereira (Reference Pereira1935), Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993); (2) Breves et al. (Reference Breves, Porto, Pissinatti, Luz and Menezes2011); (3) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014b); (4) Teles et al. (Reference Teles, Brito, Teixeira, Ribeiro, Araujo-Filho, Lima, Pereira and Almeida2016); (5) Otávio et al. (Reference Otávio, Silva, Santos, Simões, Silva, Campelo, Melo and Freire2018)

Ozolaimus megatyphlon Rudolphi, 1819

Host: Iguana iguana (1, 2, 3, 4)

Localities; (1) Santa Luzia – PB; (2) Maranhão – MA, Alagoas – AL; (3) Aiuaba, Barro, Crato, Juazeiro do Norte, Santana do Cariri – CE, Exu, Moreilândia – PE; (4) Teresina – PI

Infection sites: Small intestine, large intestine, caecum, colon and rectum.

References: (1) Pereira (Reference Pereira1935), Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993); (2) Breves et al. (Reference Breves, Porto, Pissinatti, Luz and Menezes2011); (3) Teles et al. (Reference Teles, Brito, Teixeira, Ribeiro, Araujo-Filho, Lima, Pereira and Almeida2016); (4) Otávio et al. (Reference Otávio, Silva, Santos, Simões, Silva, Campelo, Melo and Freire2018)

Ozolaimus sp.

Host: Iguana iguana

Localities: Aiuaba, Barro, Crato, Juazeiro do Norte, Santana do Cariri – CE, Exu, Moreilândia – PE

Infection site: Small intestine and large intestine.

Reference: Teles et al. (Reference Teles, Brito, Teixeira, Ribeiro, Araujo-Filho, Lima, Pereira and Almeida2016)

Family: Oxyuridae Cobbold, 1864

Gynaecometra Araujo, 1977

Gynaecometra bahiensis Araujo, 1978

Host: Polychrus acutirostris (1, 2)

Localities: (1) Xique-xique – BA; (2) Várzea Alegre – CE, Exu – PE

Infection site: Large intestine.

References: (1) Araújo (Reference Araújo1976), Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993); (2) Araujo Filho et al. (Reference Araujo Filho, Ribeiro, Brito, Teles, Sousa, Ávila and Almeida2014)

Family: Pharyngodonidae Travassos, 1919

Parapharyngodon Chatterji, 1933

Parapharyngodon alvarengai Freitas, Reference Freitas1957

Hosts: Ameiva ameiva (1, 2), Ameivula ocellifera (2, 3), Amphisbaena ridleyi (19), Acratosaura mentalis (2), Brasiliscincus heathi (2, 3), Copeoglossum arajara (4), Gymnodactylus geckoides (2, 5, 6, 7), Hemidactylus agrius (3, 6, 16), Hemidactylus brasilianus (6), Hemidactylus mabouia (17), Lygodactylus klugei (2), Nothobachia ablephara Phyllopezus periosus (8), Phyllopezus pollicaris (2, 5, 6), Trachylepis atlântica (20), Tropidurus hispidus (2, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13), Tropidurus jaguaribanus (14), Tropidurus semiateniatus (2, 11, 15), Vanzosaura multiscutata (2)

Localities: (1) ESEC Aiuaba, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN; (2) Alto Sertão – SE; (3) ESEC Aiuaba, Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE; (5) ESEC Aiuaba, Várzea Alegre – CE; (6, 14) ESEC Aiuaba; (7) ESEC Aiuaba, Cuncas – CE; (8) João Câmara – RN; (9) Fazenda Experimental do Vale do Curu – CE; (10) ESEC Aiuaba, Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Camara – RN; (11) Parque Nacional Chapada Diamantina – BA; (12) Cabaceiras – PB, Barra do Cunhaú – RN; (13) Jardim Botânico Benjamim Maranhão, Mata do Pau Ferro, Mata Sítio Socorro – PB; (15) Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN; (16) Fazenda Experimental Vale do Curu – CE; (17) Paulino Neves – MA, Parnaíba – PI, Acaraú, Taiba São Gonçalo, Fortaleza, Aracati, Icapuí – CE; (18) Petrolina – PE; (19, 20) Fernando de Noronha – PE

Infection sites: Stomach, small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1, 5, 8) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014b); (2) Araújo Filho et al. (Reference Araújo Filho, Teixeira, Teles, Rocha, Almeida, Mesquita and Lacerda2020); (3, 10, 15) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Ferreira, Ribeiro, Anjos, Almeida, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014a, Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellosb); (4) Cabral et al. (Reference Cabral, Teles, Brito, Almeida, Dos Anjos, Guarnieri and Ribeiro2018); (6) Lima et al. (Reference Lima, Brito, Araújo, Teles, Ribeiro, Teixeira, Pereira and Almeida2017); (7) Alcantara et al. (Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Gonçalves-Sousa, Morais and Ávila2019); (9) Galdino et al. (Reference Galdino, Ávila, Bezerra, Passos, Melo and Zanchi-Silva2014); (11) Maia-Carneiro et al. (Reference Maia-Carneiro, Motta-Tavares, Ávila and Rocha2018); (12) Araujo Filho et al. (Reference Araujo Filho, Brito, Lima, Pereira, Mesquita, Albuquerque and Almeida2017); (13) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020); (14) Alcantara et al. (Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Sousa, Ávila and Morais2018a); (16) Anjos et al. (Reference Anjos, Holanda Bezerra, Cunha Passos, Zanchi and Barbosa Galdino2011); (17) Bezerra et al. (Reference Bezerra, Pinheiro, Melo, Braga, Anjos and Borges-Nojosa2020); (18) Ribeiro et al. (Reference Ribeiro, Ferreira, Silva, Vieira and Moura2018); (19) Ramalho et al. (Reference Ramalho, da Silva, Schwartz and Péres2009); (20) Freitas (Reference Freitas1957)

Remarks: Host C. arajara reported in Cabral et al. (Reference Cabral, Teles, Brito, Almeida, Dos Anjos, Guarnieri and Ribeiro2018) as M. arajara (M. arajara=C. arajara). Host T. atlântica reported in Freitas (Reference Freitas1957) as M. maculata.

Parapharyngodon hispidus Ferreira, Vieira, Da Silva, Ribeiro, Ferreira & Muniz-Pereira, Reference Ferreira, Vieira, Da Silva, Ribeiro, Ferreira and Muniz-Pereira2021

Host: Tropidurus hispidus

Locality: Petrolina – PE

Infection site: Large intestine.

Reference: Ferreira et al. (Reference Ferreira, Vieira, Da Silva, Ribeiro, Ferreira and Muniz-Pereira2021)

Parapharyngodon largitor Alho & Rodrigues, 1963

Host: Colobosauroides cearensis

Locality: Mauriti – CE

Infection sites: Stomach, small intestine and large intestine.

Reference: Silva Neta & Ávila (Reference Silva Neta and Ávila2018)

Parapharyngodon sceleratus Travassos, 1923

Hosts: Brasiliscincus agilis (1), Hemidactylus mabouia (2), Anolis brasiliensis (3), Phyllopezus pollicaris (2), Psychosaura macrorhyncha (1, 4), Tropidurus hispidus (5, 6), Tropidurus semitaeniatus (7, 8), Tropidurus torquatus (7, 9, 10)

Localities: (1) Abrolhos – BA; (2) Crato – CE; (3) Crato – CE; (4) Trancoso – BA; (5) Crato, Barbalha, Juazeiro do Norte, Nova Olinda, Iguatu – CE; (6) Chapada do Araripe – CE; (7) Mogeiro, Areia, Lagoa do Remigio, Umbuzeiro, João Pessoa – PB, Cruzeta, Curraes Novos, Ceará-Mirim – RN, Garanhús – PE; (8) Ceará – CE, Piauí – PI; (9) Areia – PB, Cruzeta – RN; (10) Salvador, Canudos – BA, Mogeiro, Lagoa do Remigio, Umbuzeiro, João Pessoa – PB, Currais Novos, Ceará Mirim – RN, Garanhus – PE

Infection sites: Intestine, small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Rocha & Vcribradic (Reference Rocha and Vrcibradic2003); (2) Sousa et al. (Reference Sousa, Brito, Ávila, Teles, Araujo-Filho, Teixeira, Anjos and Almeida2014); (3) Amorim & Ávila (Reference Amorim and Ávila2019); (4) Vcribradic (Reference Vrcibradic, Rocha and Van Sluys2001); (5) Lopes et al. (Reference Lopes, Silva, Datas and Almeida2007); (6) Anjos et al. (Reference Anjos, Ávila, Ribeiro, Almeida and da Silva2012); (7) Pereira et al. (Reference Pereira1935); (8) Ávila et al. (Reference Ávila, Anjos, Ribeiro, Morais, da Silva and Almeida2012); (9) Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente1978); (10) Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993)

Remarks: Host A. brasiliensis called Norops brasiliensis in Amorim & Ávila (Reference Amorim and Ávila2019). Host P. macrorhyncha reported in Vcribradic (Reference Vrcibradic, Rocha and Van Sluys2001) and Rocha & Vcribradic (Reference Rocha and Vrcibradic2003) as M. macorhyncha.

Parapharyngodon sp.

Hosts: Ameiva ameiva (1), Ameivula nativo (2); Ameivula ocellifera (3), Ameivula pyrrhogularis (4), Hemidactylus mabouia (3), Procellosaurinus erythrocercus (5), Tropidurus hispidus (3, 6, 7), Tropidurus semitaeniatus (6), Tropidurus torquatus (1)

Localities: (1) Ondina – BA; (2) Guaratiba – BA; (3) Ceará – CE; (4) ESEC Aiuaba, Cuncas, Dom Quintino, Quitaiús – CE; (5) Petrolina – PE; (6) Piauí – PI; (7) Cabaceiras, João Pessoa – PB, Barra do Cunhaú – RN

Infection sites: Lung, small intestine, large intestine and caecum.

References: (1) Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993); (2) Menezes et al. (Reference Menezes, Vrcibradic, Vicente, Dutra and Rocha2004); (3, 6) Ávila et al. (Reference Ávila, Anjos, Ribeiro, Morais, da Silva and Almeida2012); (4) Silva et al. Reference Silva, Manoel, Uieda, Avila and Silva2019b); (5) Ferreira et al. (Reference Ferreira, Vieira, Ribeiro, Muniz Pereira and Nunes da Silva2020a); (7)

Remarks: Host Ameivulla ocellifera reported in Ávila et al. (Reference Ávila, Anjos, Ribeiro, Morais, da Silva and Almeida2012) as Cnemidophorus ocellifer.

Parapharyngodon verrucosus Freitas & Dobbin, 1959

Hosts: Diploglossus lessonae (1, 2), Tropidurus hispidus (3)

Localities: (1) João Alfredo – PE; (2) Crato, Barbalha, Juazeiro do Norte, Nova Olinda, Iguatu – CE; (3) Cabaceiras – PB, Barra do Cunhaú – RN

Infection sites: Intestine, small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993); (2) Lopes et al. (Reference Lopes, Silva, Datas and Almeida2007); (3) Araujo Filho et al. (Reference Araujo Filho, Brito, Lima, Pereira, Mesquita, Albuquerque and Almeida2017)

Pharyngodon Diesing, 1961

Pharyngodon cesarpintoi Pereira, Reference Pereira1935

Hosts: Ameiva ameiva (1, 3), Ameivula nigrigula (2), Ameivula ocellifera (3), Ameivula pyrhogularis (4), Ameivula sp. (5), Lygodactylus klugei (3), Phyllopezus pollicaris (3), Salvator merianae (3); Tropidurus hispidus (3), Tropidurus semitaeniatus (3), Vanzosaura multiscutata (3),

Localities: (1, 5) Juazeiro – PB; (2) Serra do Santo Inácio – BA, Pirambu – SE; (3) Alto Sertão – SE; (4) ESEC Aiuaba, Cuncas, Dom Quintino, Quitaiús – CE

Infection sites: Stomach, small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993); (2) Xavier et al. (Reference Xavier, Anjos, Gazêta, Machado, Storti-Melo and Dias2019); (3) Araújo Filho et al. (Reference Araújo Filho, Teixeira, Teles, Rocha, Almeida, Mesquita and Lacerda2020); (4) Silva et al. (Reference Silva, Manoel, Uieda, Ávila and Silva RJda2019); (5) Pereira (Reference Pereira1935)

Remarks: The host Ameivula sp. is identified in the original description (Pereira, Reference Pereira1935) as C. lemniscatus. However, C. leminiscatus does not occur in the Caatinga biome.

Pharyngodon sp.

Hosts: Ameiva ameiva (1), Ameivula ocellifera (2), Kentropyx calcarata (3), Tropidurus hispidus (2, 4), Tropidurus torquatus (5)

Localities: (1) Mata do Pau Ferro – PB; (2) ESEC Aiuaba, Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN; (3) Mata Sítio Socorro – PB; (4) Crato, Barbalha, Juazeiro do Norte, Nova Olinda, Iguatu – CE; (5) Salvador – BA

Infection sites: Stomach and large intestine.

References: (1, 3) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020); (2) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Ferreira, Ribeiro, Anjos, Almeida, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014a, Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellosb); (4) Lopes et al. (Reference Lopes, Silva, Datas and Almeida2007); (5) Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993)

Pharyngodon travassosi Pereira, Reference Pereira1935

Hosts: Ameiva sp. (1), Anolis fuscoauratus (2)

Localities: (1) Areia – PB; (2) Serra de Maranguape, Serra de Baturité, Parque Nacional Ubajara – CE

Infection site: Small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Pereira (Reference Pereira1935); (2) Mesquita et al. (Reference Mesquita, Oliveira, Perez and Ávila2020)

Remarks: Host A. fuscoauratus called Norops fuscoauratus in Mesquita et al. (Reference Mesquita, Oliveira, Perez and Ávila2020).

Skrjabinodon Inglis, 1968

Skrjabinodon sp.

Host: Hemidacytlus mabouia

Locality: Fortaleza – CE

Infection site: Large intestine.

Reference: Bezerra et al. (Reference Bezerra, Pinheiro, Melo, Braga, Anjos and Borges-Nojosa2020)

Spauligodon Skrjabin, Schikhobalova & Lagodovska, 1960

Spauligodon oxkutzcabiensis Chitwood, 1938

Hosts: Acratosaura mentalis (2), Ameivula ocellifera (1, 2), Gymnodactylus geckoides (2, 3), Hemidactylus agrius (3), Hemidactylus brasilianus (3), Hemidacytlus mabouia (4); Lygodactylus klugei (2, 3), Phyllopezus lutzae (6), Phyllopezus periosus (7), Phyllopezus pollicaris (2, 3, 4, 8, 9), Tropidurus hispidus (5, 2), Tropidurus semitaeniatus (2), Vanzosaura multiscutata (2)

Localities: (1) ESEC Aiuaba, Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN; (2) Alto Sertão – SE; (3) ESEC Aiuaba – CE; (4) Crato – CE; (5) Fazenda Experimental do Vale do Curu – CE; (6) Mata da Serra da Saudinha – AL; (7) João Câmara – RN; (8) Ceará – CE, Piauí – PI; (9) ESEC Aiuaba, Várzea Alegre – CE;

Infection site: Small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Ferreira, Ribeiro, Anjos, Almeida, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014a, Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellosb); (2) Araújo Filho et al. (Reference Araújo Filho, Teixeira, Teles, Rocha, Almeida, Mesquita and Lacerda2020); (3) Lima et al. (Reference Lima, Brito, Araújo, Teles, Ribeiro, Teixeira, Pereira and Almeida2017); (4) Sousa et al. (Reference Sousa, Brito, Ávila, Teles, Araujo-Filho, Teixeira, Anjos and Almeida2014); (5) Galdino et al. (Reference Galdino, Ávila, Bezerra, Passos, Melo and Zanchi-Silva2014); (6) Ávila et al. (Reference Ávila, Anjos, Gonçalves, Freire, Almeida and da Silva2010a, Reference Ávila, Souza and Da Silvab); (7) Brito et al. Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014b); (8) Ávila et al. (Reference Ávila, Anjos, Ribeiro, Morais, da Silva and Almeida2012); (9) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014b);

Spauligodon loboi Ramalho, Bursey & Goldberg, 2002

Host: Strobilurus torquatus

Locality: RPPN Engenho Gargaú – PB

Infection site: Small intestine and large intestine.

Reference: Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020)

Spauligodon sp.

Hosts: Colobosauroides cearensis (1), Micrablepharus maximiliani (2), Tropidurus jaguaribanus (3)

Localities: (1) Mauriti – CE; (2) Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE; (3) ESEC Aiuaba – CE

Infection site: Small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Silva Neta & Ávila (Reference Silva Neta and Ávila2018); (2) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014b); (3) Alcantara et al. (Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Sousa, Ávila and Morais2018a)

Order: Rhabditida Chitwood, 1933

Family: Rhabdiasidae Railliet, 1916

Rhabdias Stiles & Hassall, 1905

Rhabdias sp.

Hosts: Anolis brasiliensis (1), Anolis fuscoauratus (2), Enyalius catenatus (3), Anolis ortonii (3), Tropidurus hispidus (4, 5, 6, 7)

Localities: (1) Crato – CE; (2) Serra de Maranguape, Serra de Baturité, Parque Nacional Ubajara – CE; (3) Mata de Goiamunduba – PB; (4) Chapada do Araripe – CE; (5) Ceará – CE, Piauí – PI; (6) ESEC Aiuaba, Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN; (7) Parque Nacional Chapada Diamantina – BA

Infection sites: Lung and small intestine.

References: (1) Amorim & Ávila (Reference Amorim and Ávila2019); (2) Mesquita et al. (Reference Mesquita, Oliveira, Perez and Ávila2020); (3) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020); (4) Almeida et al. (Reference Almeida, Ribeiro, Santana, Vieira, Anjos and Sales2009c); (5) Ávila et al. (Reference Ávila, Anjos, Ribeiro, Morais, da Silva and Almeida2012); (6) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Ferreira, Ribeiro, Anjos, Almeida, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014a, Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellosb); (7)

Remarks: Hosts A. brasiliensis, A. fuscoauratus and A. ortonii reported in Amorim & Ávila (Reference Amorim and Ávila2019), Mesquita et al. (Reference Mesquita, Oliveira, Perez and Ávila2020) and Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020) as Norops brasiliensis, N. fuscoauratus and N. ortonii, respectively.

Family: Strongyloididae Chitwood & Mclntosh, 1934

Strongyloides Grassi, 1879

Strongyloides ophidiae Pereira, 1929

Host: Philodryas olfersii (1)

Locality: (1) Ilha Grande – PI

Infection sites: Stomach, small intestine and large intestine.

Reference: (1) Castro Araújo et al. (Reference Castro Araújo, Silva, Machado, Oliveira and Ávila2020)

Strongyloides sp.

Host: Anolis fuscoauratus

Localities: Serra de Maranguape, Serra de Baturité, Parque Nacional Ubajara – CE

Infection site: Large intestine.

Reference: Mesquita et al. (Reference Mesquita, Oliveira, Perez and Ávila2020)

Remarks: Called Norops fuscoauratus in this paper.

PENTASTOMIDA

Phylum: Pentastomida Huxley, 1869

Class: Eupentastomida Waloszek, Repetski & Mass, 2006

Order: Cephalobaenida Heymons, 1935

Family: Cephalobaenidae Heymons, 1922

Cephalobaena Heymons, 1922

Cephalobaena tetrapoda Heymons, 1922

Hosts: Bothrops erythromelas (1), Lygophis lineatus (2), Oxybelis aeneus (3), Philodryas nattereri (3, 4)

Localities: (1) Sítio Pedra Preta – CE; (2) Floresta Nacional do Araripe, Batateiras – CE; (3) ESEC Seridó – RN; (4) Crato – CE;

Infection sites: Lung and respiratory tract.

References: (1) Oliveira et al. (Reference Oliveira, Teixeira, Teles, Araújo Filho, Brito and Almeida2015); (2) Almeida et al. (Reference Almeida, Brito, Ferreira and Christoffersen2006a); (3) Almeida et al. (Reference Almeida, Guedes, Freire and Vasconcellos2008a); (4) Almeida et al. (Reference Almeida, Vasconcellos, Lopes and Freire2007)

Order: Porocephalida Heymons, 1935

Family: Porocephalidae Sambom, 1922

Porocephalus Humboldt, 1812

Porocephalus sp.

Host: Boa constrictor

Locality: Recife – PE

Infection site: Lung.

Reference: Almeida et al. (Reference Almeida, Ferreira, Guarnieri and Brito2008b)

Porocephalus stilesi Sambom, 1910

Host: Lachesis muta

Locality: Recife – PE

Infection site: Lung.

Reference: Almeida et al. (Reference Almeida, Ferreira, Guarnieri and Brito2008b)

Order: Raillietiellida Almeida & Christoffersen, 1999

Family: Raillietiellidae Sambom, 1922

Raillietiella Sambom, 1910

Raillietiella frenata

Host: Hemidactylus mabouia (1, 2, 3)

Localities: (1) Barbalha – CE; (2) João Pessoa – PB; (3) Paulino Neves – MA, Acaraú, Fortaleza – CE

Infection site: Lung.

References: (1) Anjos et al. (Reference Anjos, Almeida, Vasconcellos, Freire and Rocha2008); (2) Almeida et al. (Reference Almeida, Santana, Vieira and Wanderley2008c); (3) Bezerra et al. (Reference Bezerra, Pinheiro, Melo, Braga, Anjos and Borges-Nojosa2020)

Raillietiella freitasi Motta & Gomes, 1968

Hosts: Trachylepis atlântica (1), Tropidurus torquatus (2),

Localities: (1) Fernando de Noronha – PE; (2) Salvador – BA

Infection site: Lung.

References: (1) Rêgo (Reference Rêgo1983), (1) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Almeida, Anjos and Silva2012); (2) Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente1978)

Raillietiella furcocerca Diesing, 1863

Hosts: Leptodeira annulata (1), Philodryas olfersii (2), Philodryas nattereri (3, 4)

Localities: (1) Aiuaba, Barro, Farias Brito, Jati, Mauriti – CE; (2) Ilha Grande – PI; (3) Crato – CE; (4) ESEC Seridó - RN

Infection sites: Lung and respiratory tract.

References: (1) Carvalho et al. Reference Carvalho, Silva-Neta, Silva, Oliveira, Nunes, Souza and Ávila2018); (2) Castro Araújo et al. (Reference Castro Araújo, Silva, Machado, Oliveira and Ávila2020); (3) Almeida et al. Reference Almeida, Vasconcellos, Lopes and Freire2007); (4) Almeida et al. (Reference Almeida, Guedes, Freire and Vasconcellos2008a)

Raillietiella gigliolii Hett, 1924

Hosts: Amphisbaena alba (1, 2), Amphisbaena vermicularis (3)

Localities: (1) Floresta Nacional do Araripe – CE; (2) Cruz do Espirito Santo – PB; (3) Chapada do Araripe – CE

Infection site: Respiratory tract.

References: (1) Almeida et al. (Reference Almeida, Ferreira, Brito and Christoffersen2006b); (2, 3) Almeida et al. (Reference Almeida, Sales, Santana, Vieira, Ribeiro, Alves and Nóbrega2009b)

Raillietiella mottae Almeida, Freire & Lopes, 2008

Hosts: Ameiva ameiva (8), Copeoglossum arajara (7), Gymnodactylus geckoides (1), Hemidactylus agrius (1), Hemidactylus brasilianus (1), Hemidactylus mabouia (2), Micrablepharus maximiliani (3), Phyllopezus pollicaris (1, 4, 5); Phyllopezus periosus (5, 6), Tropidurus hispidus (9), Tropidurus semitaeniatus (10)

Localities: (1) Aiuaba – CE; (2) Barbalha – CE; (3) Mataraca – PB; (4) Paulistana – PI; (5) ESEC Aiuaba, Várzea Alegre – CE (5) Cachoeira de Missão Velha – CE; (6) João Câmara – RN; (7) Chapada do Araripe, Barbalha, Crato – CE; (8) Barbalha, Várzea Alegre – CE; (9) ESEC Aiuaba, Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Camara – RN; (10) Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN

Infection sites: Lung and respiratory tract.

References: (1) Lima et al. (Reference Lima, Brito, Araújo Filho, Teles, Ribeiro, Teixeira, Pereira and Almeida2018); (2) Anjos et al. (Reference Anjos, Almeida, Vasconcellos, Freire and Rocha2008); (3) Almeida et al. (Reference Almeida, Santana, Vieira, Wanderley and Ribeiro2009a); (4) Sousa et al. (Reference Sousa, Ribeiro, Roberto, Teles and Almeida2010); (5, 6, 10) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014b); (5) Nascimento et al. (Reference Nascimento, Araujo-Filho, Sampaio, Brito and Almeida2020); (7) Ribeiro et al. (Reference Ribeiro, Ferreira, Brito, Teles, Ávila, Almeida, Anjos and Guarnieri2012); (8) Silva et al. (Reference Silva, Santos, Brito, Almeida and Ribeiro2019a)

Remarks: Host C. arajara reported in Ribeiro et al. (Reference Ribeiro, Ferreira, Brito, Teles, Ávila, Almeida, Anjos and Guarnieri2012) as M. arajara.

Raillietiella sp.

Hosts: Psychosaura macrorhyncha (1), Micrurus ibiboboca (2), Ameivula ocellifera (3), Ameivula nigrigula (3)

Localities: (1) Trancoso – BA; (2) Crato – CE; (3) Santo Inácio – BA, Pirambu – SE

Infection site: Encysted near the lung and respiratory tract.

References: (1) Vrcibradic et al. (Reference Vrcibradic, Rocha and Van Sluys2001); (2) Almeida et al. (Reference Almeida, Vasconcellos, Lopes and Freire2007); (3) Xavier et al. (Reference Xavier, Anjos, Gazêta, Machado, Storti-Melo and Dias2019)

Remarks: Host P. macrorhyncha reported in Vrcibradic et al. (Reference Vrcibradic, Rocha and Van Sluys2001) as M. macrorhyncha.

PLATYHELMINTHES

Phylum: Platyhelminthes Gegenbaur, 1859

Class: Cestoda Rudolphi, 1808

Cestoda undetermined

Hosts: Kentropyx calcarata (1), Leptodeira annulata (2)

Localities: (1) REBIO Guaribas, Mata Sítio Socorro – PB; (2) Aiuaba, Barro, Farias Brito, Jati, Mauriti – CE

Infection sites: Stomach, small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020); (2) Carvalho et al. (Reference Carvalho, Silva-Neta, Silva, Oliveira, Nunes, Souza and Ávila2018)

Order: Cyclophyllidea Braun, 1900

Family: Anoplocephalidae Cholodkovsky, 1902

Oochoristica Luhe, 1898

Oochoristica ameivae Beddard, 1914

Hosts: Ameivula nativo (1), Psychosaura macrorhyncha (2)

Localities: (1) Guaratiba – BA; (2) Trancoso – BA

Infection sites: Stomach and small intestine.

References: (1) Menezes et al. (Reference Menezes, Vrcibradic, Vicente, Dutra and Rocha2004); (2) Vrcibradic et al. (Reference Vrcibradic, Rocha and Van Sluys2001)

Remarks: Host A. nativo reported in Menezes et al. (Reference Menezes, Vrcibradic, Vicente, Dutra and Rocha2004) as C. nativo, and P. macrorhyncha reported in Vrcibradic et al. (Reference Vrcibradic, Rocha and Van Sluys2001) as M. macrorhyncha.

Oochoristica bresslaui Fuhrmann, 1927

Hosts: Tropidurus hispidus (1), Tropidurus semitaeniatus (2); Tropidurus torquatus (3)

Localities: (1) Fazenda Experimental do Vale do Curu – CE; (2) Parque Nacional Chapada Diamantina – BA; (3) Salvador, Serrinha – BA

Infection site: Small intestine.

References: (1) Galdino et al. (Reference Galdino, Ávila, Bezerra, Passos, Melo and Zanchi-Silva2014); (2) Maia-Carneiro et al. (Reference Maia-Carneiro, Motta-Tavares, Ávila and Rocha2017), (3) Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente1978)

Oochoristica noronhae Bursey, Rocha, Menezes & Ariani, Reference Bursey, Rocha, Menezes, Ariani and Vrcibradic2010

Host: Trachylepis atlântica

Locality: Fernando de Noronha – PE

Infection site: Small intestine

Reference: Bursey et al. (Reference Bursey, Rocha, Menezes, Ariani and Vrcibradic2010)

Oochoristica sp.

Hosts: Acratosaura mentalis (2), Ameiva ameiva (2, 10, 11), Ameivula nigrigula (12), Ameivula ocellifera (12, 13), Brasiliscincus heathi (1, 2), Colobosauroides cearensis (6), Gymnodactylus geckoides (1), Hemidactylus agrius (5), Hemidactylus brasilianus (5), Hemidactylus mabouia (4, 10), Micrablepharus maximiliani (7), Nothobachia ablephara (8), Phyllopezus pollicaris (4, 5), Procellosaurinus erythrocercus (9), Salvator merianae (17), Tropidurus hispidus (2, 13, 14, 15), Tropidurus semitaeniatus (2, 16)

Localities: (1) ESEC Aiuaba, Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE; (2) Alto Sertão – SE; (3) ESEC Aiuaba, Várzea Alegre – CE; (4) Crato – CE; (5) ESEC Aiuaba – CE; (6) Mauriti – CE; (7) Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE; (8) Petrolina – PE; (9) Petrolina – PE; (10) Paulino Neves – MA, Parnaíba – PI, Acaraú, Taíba São Gonçalo, Fortaleza, Icapuí – CE; (10) ESEC Aiuaba, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN; (11) Mata do Pau Ferro – PB; (12) Serra de Santo Inácio – BA, Pirambu – SE; (13) ESEC Aiuaba, Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Câmara – RN; (14) Cabaceiras – PB, Barra do Cunhaú – RN; (15) Jardim Botânico Benjamim Maranhão – PB; (16) Santa Quitéria, Várzea Alegre – CE, João Camara – RN; (17) Fernando de Noronha – PE

Infection sites: Cavity, stomach, small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1, 3, 7, 10) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014b); (2) Araújo Filho et al. (Reference Araújo Filho, Teixeira, Teles, Rocha, Almeida, Mesquita and Lacerda2020); (4) Sousa et al. (Reference Sousa, Brito, Ávila, Teles, Araujo-Filho, Teixeira, Anjos and Almeida2014); (5) Lima et al. (Reference Lima, Brito, Araújo, Teles, Ribeiro, Teixeira, Pereira and Almeida2017); (6) Silva Neta & Ávila (Reference Silva Neta and Ávila2018); (8) Ribeiro et al. (Reference Ribeiro, Ferreira, Silva, Vieira and Moura2018); (9) Ferreira et al. (Reference Ferreira, Vieira, Ribeiro, Muniz Pereira and Nunes da Silva2020a); (10) Bezerra et al. (Reference Bezerra, Pinheiro, Melo, Braga, Anjos and Borges-Nojosa2020); (11, 15) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020); (12) Xavier et al. Reference Xavier, Anjos, Gazêta, Machado, Storti-Melo and Dias2019); (13, 16) Brito et al. (Reference Brito, Ferreira, Ribeiro, Anjos, Almeida, Mesquita and Vasconcellos2014a, Reference Brito, Corso, Almeida, Ferreira, Almeida, Anjos, Mesquita and Vasconcellosb); (14) Araujo Filho et al. (Reference Araujo Filho, Brito, Lima, Pereira, Mesquita, Albuquerque and Almeida2017); (17) Ramalho et al. (Reference Ramalho, da Silva, Schwartz and Péres2009)

Oochoristica travassosi Rêgo & Ibáñez, 1965

Hosts: Ameivula pyrrhogularis (1), Amphisbaena ridleyi (2), Trachylepis atlântica (2), Tropidurus jaguaribanus (3)

Localities: (1) ESEC Aiuaba, Cuncas, Dom Quintino, Quitaiús – CE; (2) Fernando de Noronha – PE (3) ESEC Aiuaba – CE

Infection sites: Oesophagus and small intestine.

References: (1) Silva et al. (Reference Silva, Manoel, Uieda, Avila and Silva2019b); (2) Ramalho et al. (Reference Ramalho, da Silva, Schwartz and Péres2009); (3) Alcantara et al. (Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Sousa, Ávila and Morais2018a)

Pseudosmenoviella Ceccolini & Cianferoni, 2021

Synonym: Semenoviella Spasskij, 1951

Pseudosmenoviella amphisbaenae Ceccolini & Cianferoni, 2021

Synonym: Semenoviella amphisbaenae Rudolphi, 1819

Host: Amphisbaena alba – Areia – PB

Locality: Areia – PB

Infection site: Large intestine.

Reference: Pereira et al. (Reference Pereira, Silva, Sampaio, Silva, Oliveira, Pires, Frade and Araújo2021)

Order: Proteocephalidea Mola, 1928

Family: Proteocephalidae La Rue, 1911

Proteocephalidae undetermined

Host: Hemidactylus mabouia

Locality: Acaraú – CE

Infection site: Small intestine.

Reference: Bezerra et al. (Reference Bezerra, Pinheiro, Melo, Braga, Anjos and Borges-Nojosa2020)

Ophiotaenia La Rue, 1911

Ophiotaenia sp.

Hosts: Philodryas olfersii (1), Pseudoboa nigra (2)

Localities: (1) Ilha Grande – PI; (2) Ceará – CE

Infection site: Small intestine.

References: Castro Araújo et al. (Reference Castro Araújo, Silva, Machado, Oliveira and Ávila2020); (2) Matias et al. (Reference Matias, Silva, Sousa and Ávila2018)

Class: Trematoda Rudolphi, 1808

Family: Brachycoeliidae Looss, 1899

Cymatocarpus Looss, 1899

Cymatocarpus solearis Braun, 1899

Host: Eretmochelys imbricata

Localities: Ceará – CE, Bahia – BA

Infection site: Stomach.

Reference: Werneck et al. (Reference Werneck, Lima, Pires and Silva2015)

Family: Cladorchiidae Fischoeder, 1901

Nematophila Travassos, 1934

Nematophila grandis Diesing, 1839

Host: Phrynops geoffroanus

Locality: Capibaribe – PE

Infection site: Large intestine.

Reference: Fonseca et al. (Reference Fonseca, Rojas, Vieira, dos Santos Ferreira, Da Silva Rodrigues, De Barros, Júnior, Moura and de Oliveira2021)

Family: Dicrocoeliidae Odhner, 1910

Euparadistomum Tubangui, 1931

Euparadistomum paraense Jansen, 1941

Host: Tropidurus hispidus

Locality: Alto Sertão – SE

Infection site: Gallbladder.

Reference: Araújo Filho et al. (Reference Araújo Filho, Teixeira, Teles, Rocha, Almeida, Mesquita and Lacerda2020)

Paradistomum Kossack, 1910

Paradistomum parvissimum Travassos, 1918

Hosts: Psychosaura macrorhyncha (1), Tropidurus torquatus (2)

Localities: (1) Trancoso – BA; (2) Salvador – BA

Infection sites: Gallbladder and choledochal duct.

References: (1) Vrcibradic et al. (Reference Vrcibradic, Rocha and Van Sluys2001); (2) Vicente (Reference Vicente1978)

Remarks: Host P. macrorhyncha reported in Vrcibradic et al. (Reference Vrcibradic, Rocha and Van Sluys2001) as M. macrorhyncha.

Paradistomum rabusculum Kossack, 1910

Host: Gymnodactylus darwinii

Locality: São Lourenço da Mata – PE

Infection site: Liver.

Reference: Oitaven et al. (Reference Oitaven, da Silva Ribeiro, de Moura and de Oliveira2019)

Paradistomum sp.

Host: Hemidactylus mabouia

Localities: Paulino Neves – MA, Parnaíba – PI, Acaraú, Taiba São Gonçalo, Fortaleza, Aracati, Icapuí – CE

Infection sites: Gallbladder, body cavity and small intestine.

Reference: Bezerra et al. (Reference Bezerra, Pinheiro, Melo, Braga, Anjos and Borges-Nojosa2020)

Platynosomum Looss, 1907

Platynosomum sp.

Hosts: Amphisbaena ridleyi (1), Hemidactylus mabouia (2), Trachylepis atlântica (3)

Localities: (1, 3) Fernando de Noronha – PE; (2) Paulino Neves – MA, Parnaíba – PI, Acaraú, Taiba São Gonçalo, Fortaleza, Aracati, Icapuí – CE

Infection sites: Gallbladder, bile duct, body cavity and small intestine.

References: (1) Ávila & Silva (Reference Ávila and Silva2010); (2) Bezerra et al. (Reference Bezerra, Pinheiro, Melo, Braga, Anjos and Borges-Nojosa2020); (3) Ramalho et al. (Reference Ramalho, da Silva, Schwartz and Péres2009)

Family: Echinostomatidae Looss, 1899

Prionosomoides Freitas & Dobbin Junior, 1967

Prionosomoides scalaris Freitas & Dobbin Junior, 1967

Host: Phrynops geoffroanus

Locality: Capibaribe – PE

Infection site: Small intestine.

Reference: Fonseca et al. (Reference Fonseca, Rojas, Vieira, dos Santos Ferreira, Da Silva Rodrigues, De Barros, Júnior, Moura and de Oliveira2021)

Family: Gorgoderidae Looss, 1899

Gorgoderina Looss, 1902

Gorgoderina sp.

Host: Phrynops geoffroanus

Locality: Cariús – CE

Infection site: Small intestine.

Reference: Pereira et al. (Reference Pereira, Brito, De Araújo, Teixeira, Teles, Santana, Lima and Almeida2018)

Family: Mesocoelidae Dollfus, 1929

Mesocoelium Odhner, 1910

Mesocoelium monas Rudolphi, 1819

Hosts: Amphisbaena ridleyi (3), Anolis fuscoauratus (1), Lygodactylus klugei (2), Trachylepis atlântica (3)

Localities: (1) Serra de Maranguape, Serra de Baturité, Parque Nacional Ubajara – CE; (2) Fazenda Experimental do Vale do Curu – CE; (3) Fernando de Noronha – PE;

Infection site: Small intestine.

References: (1) Mesquita et al. (Reference Mesquita, Oliveira, Perez and Ávila2020); (2) Anjos et al. (Reference Anjos, Holanda Bezerra, Cunha Passos, Zanchi and Barbosa Galdino2011); (3) Ramalho et al. (Reference Ramalho, da Silva, Schwartz and Péres2009)

Remarks: Host A. fuscoauratus reported in Mesquita et al. (Reference Mesquita, Oliveira, Perez and Ávila2020) as N. fuscoauratus.

Family: Plagiorchiidae Lühe, 1901

Haplometroides Odhner, 1910

Haplometroides odhneri Ruiz & Perez, 1959

Hosts: Anolis ortonii (1), Coleodactylus meridionalis (2), Dactyloa punctata (2), Dryadosaura nordestina (1, 3), Psychosaura agmosticha (4); Tropidurus hispidus (5)

Localities: (1) Mata de Goiamunduba – PB; (2, 4) REBIO Guaribas; (3) RPPN Engenho Gargaú, REBIO Guaribas, Mata Sítio Socorro – PB; (5) Jardim Botânico Benjamim Maranhão – PB

Infection sites: Stomach. small intestine and large intestine.

References: (1, 2) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020, Reference Teixeira, Sampaio, Araujo-Filho, Teles, Almeida, Mesquita and Brito2021); (3) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Silva, Brito, Teles, Araujo-Filho, Franzini, Santana, Almeida and Mesquita2018a); (4, 5) Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020)

Remarks: Host A. ortonii reported in Teixeira et al. (Reference Teixeira, Riul, Brito, Araujo-Filho, Teles, de Oliveira Almeida and Mesquita2020, Reference Teixeira, Sampaio, Araujo-Filho, Teles, Almeida, Mesquita and Brito2021) as N. ortonii.

Class: Monogenoidea Bychowsky, 1937

Family: Polystomatidae Gamble, 1896

Polystomoides Ward, 1917

Polystomoides brasiliensis Vieira, Novelli, Sousa & Lima, 2008

Hosts: Mesoclemmys tuberculata (1), Phrynops geoffroanus (1); Phrynops geoffroanus (2)

Localities: (1) Poço Redondo, Tobias Barreto, Areia Branca, Pirambú, Capela – SE; (2) Capibaribe – PE

Infection sites: Mouth and oral cavity.

References: (1) Santana et al. (Reference Santana, Iwama, Teixeira, Moura, Faria and Mesquita2019); (2) Fonseca et al. (Reference Fonseca, Rojas, Vieira, dos Santos Ferreira, Da Silva Rodrigues, De Barros, Júnior, Moura and de Oliveira2021)

Family: Pronocephalidae Loos, 1899

Cricocephalus Looss, 1899

Cricocephalus albus Kuhl & Hasselt, 1822

Host: Eretmochelys imbricata

Localities: Ceará – CE, Bahia – BA

Infection sites: Oesophagus, stomach, small intestine and large intestine.

Reference: Werneck et al. (Reference Werneck, Lima, Pires and Silva2015)

Diaschistorchis Johnston, 1913

Diaschistorchis pandus Braun, 1901

Host: Eretmochelys imbricata

Localities: Ceará – CE, Bahia – BA

Infection site: Small intestine.

Reference: Werneck et al. (Reference Werneck, Lima, Pires and Silva2015)

Metacetabulum Freitas & Lent, 1938

Metacetabulum invaginatum Freitas & Lent, 1938

Host: Eretmochelys imbricata

Localities: Ceará – CE, Bahia – BA

Infection site: Small intestine.

Reference: Werneck et al. (Reference Werneck, Lima, Pires and Silva2015)

Pronocephalus Looss, 1899

Pronocephalus obliquus Looss, 1901

Host: Eretmochelys imbricata

Localities: Ceará – CE, Bahia – BA

Infection site: Stomach.

Reference: Werneck et al. (Reference Werneck, Lima, Pires and Silva2015)

Family: Proterodiplostomidae Dubois, 1936

Herpetodiplostomum Achatz, Brito, Fecchio & Tkach, 2021

Synonym: Cheloniodiplostomum Sudarikov, 1960

Herpetodiplostomum testudines Achatz, Brito, Fecchio & Tkach, 2021

Synonym: Cheloniodiplostomum testudines Dubois, 1936

Host: Phrynops geoffroanus

Locality: Capibaribe – PE

Infection site: Small intestine.

Reference: Fonseca et al. (Reference Fonseca, Rojas, Vieira, dos Santos Ferreira, Da Silva Rodrigues, De Barros, Júnior, Moura and de Oliveira2021)

Family: Styphlotrematidae Baer, 1924

Styphlotrema Odhner, 1911

Styphlotrema solitaria Looss, 1899

Host: Eretmochelys imbricata

Localities: Ceará – CE, Bahia – BA

Infection sites: Stomach and large intestine.

Reference: Werneck et al. (Reference Werneck, Lima, Pires and Silva2015)

Family: Telorchiidae Looss, 1899

Orchidasma Looss, 1900

Orchidasma amphiorchis Braun, 1899

Host: Eretmochelys imbricata

Localities: Ceará – CE, Bahia – BA

Infection site: Large intestine.

Reference: Werneck et al. (Reference Werneck, Lima, Pires and Silva2015)

Telorchis Looss, 1899

Telorchis birabeni Mané-Garzon & Gil, 1961

Host: Phrynops geoffroanus

Locality: Capibaribe – PE

Infection site: Small intestine.

Reference: Fonseca et al. (Reference Fonseca, Rojas, Vieira, dos Santos Ferreira, Da Silva Rodrigues, De Barros, Júnior, Moura and de Oliveira2021)

Plerocercoid larvae

Host: Hemidactylus mabouia

Localities: Acaraú, Fortaleza, Aracati, Icapuí – CE

Infection sites: Body cavity and large intestine.

Reference: Bezerra et al. (Reference Bezerra, Pinheiro, Melo, Braga, Anjos and Borges-Nojosa2020)

Trematoda digenetic undetermined

Host: Philodryas olfersii

Locality: Ilha Grande – PI

Infection site: Large intestine.

Reference: Castro Araújo et al. (Reference Castro Araújo, Silva, Machado, Oliveira and Ávila2020)

Host–parasite list

Family Amphisbaenidae

Amphisbaena alba Linnaeus, 1758

Aplectana albae

Aplectana pusilla

Aplectana unguiculata

Pseudosemenoviella amphisbaenae

Raillietiella gigliolii

Amphisbaena ridleyi Boulenger, 1890

Aplectana albae

Mesocoelium monas

Oochoristica travassosi

Parapharyngodon alvarengai

Platynosomum sp.

Amphisbaena vermicularis Wagler, 1824

Aplectana sp.

Maracaya graciai

Physaloptera sp.

Raillietiella gigliolii

Amphisbaena sp.

Aplectana pusilla

Aplectana unguiculata

Leposternon microcephalum Wagler, 1824

Paradollfusnema amphisbaenia

Leposternon polystegum (Duméril, 1851)

Aplectana nordestina

Paradollfusnema amphisbaenia

Family Aligatoridae

Caiman latirostris (Daudin, 1802)

Amblyomma fuscum

Amblyomma rotundatum

Family Chelidae

Mesoclemmys tuberculata (Luederwaldt, 1926)

Amblyomma rotundatum

Physaloptera retusa

Polystomoides brasiliensis

Serpinema monospiculatus

Spiroxys figueiredoi

Phrynops geoffroanus (Schweigger, 1812)

Gorgoderina sp.

Herpetodiplostomum testudinis

Nematophila grandis

Physaloptera retusa

Polystomoides brasiliensis

Prionosomoides scalaris

Spiroxys figueiredoi

Telorchis birabeni

Family Cheloniidae

Chelonia mydas (Linnaeus, 1758)

Tonaudia freitasi

Eretmochelys imbricata (Linnaeus, 1766)

Cricocephalus albus

Cymatocarpus solearis

Diaschistorchis pandus

Metacetabulum invaginatum

Orchidasma amphiorchis

Pronocephalus obliquus

Styphlotrema solitária

Family Kinosternidae

Kinosternon scorpioides (Linnaeus, 1766)

Serpinema magathi

Spiroxys figueiredoi

Family Testudinidae

Chelonoidis carbonarius (Spix, 1824)

Amblyomma rotundatum

Chelonoidis denticulatus (Linnaeus, 1766)

Amblyomma rotundatum

Family Boidae

Boa constrictor Linnaeus, 1758

Amblyomma fuscum

Amblyomma rotundatum

Amblyomma sp.

Porocephalus sp.

Corallus hortulana (Linnaeus, 1758)

Ornithodoros mimon

Amblyomma rotundatum

Epicrates assissi Machado, 1945

Amblyomma rotundatum

Epicrates cenchria (Linnaeus, 1758)

Amblyomma rotundatum

Amblyomma sp.

Eunectes murinus (Linnaeus, 1758)

Amblyomma rotundatum

Family Elapidae

Micrurus ibiboboca (Merrem, 1820)

Amblyomma rotundatum

Ophidascaris cretinorum

Physaloptera sp.

Raillietiella sp.

Micrurus lemniscatus (Linnaeus, 1758)

Amblyomma rotundatum

Family Colubridae/Dpsadidae

Atractus guentheri (Wucherer, 1861)

Amblyomma rotundatum

Chironius exoletus (Linnaeus, 1758)

Amblyomma sp.

Chironius flavolineatus Jan, 1863

Amblyomma rotundatum

Amblyomma sp.

Drymarchon corais (Boie, 1827)

Amblyomma rotundatum

Erythrolamprus viridis (Günther, 1862)

Amblyomma sp.

Aplectana sp.

Centrorhynchus sp.

Physaloptera liophis

Helicops carinicaudus (Wied-Neuwied, 1824)

Amblyomma rotundatum

Leptodeira annulata (Linnaeus, 1758)

Amblyomma sp.

Cestoda undetermined

Cistacant

Hexametra boddaertii

Ornithodoros rietcorreai

Ornithodoros sp.

Oswaldocruzia sp.

Oxyascaris sp,

Physaloptera sp.

Raillietiella furcocerca

Raillietnema spectans

Lygophis dilepis Cope, 1862

Amblyomma rotundatum

Amblyomma sp.

Lygophis lineatus (Linnaeus, 1758)

Cephalobaena tetrapoda

Oxybelis aeneus (Wagler, 1824)

Cephalobaena tetrapoda

Physaloptera nordestina

Oxyrhopus trigeminus Duméril, Bibron & Duméril, 1854

Ornithodoros sp.

Amblyomma rotundatum

Amblyomma sp.

Physaloptera sp.

Philodryas nattereri (Steindachner, 1870)

Amblyomma rotundatum

Amblyomma sp.

Cephalobaena tetrapoda

Oligacanthorhynchus sp.

Physaloptera sp.

Raillietiella furcocerca

Philodryas olfersii (Lichtenstein, 1823)

Amblyomma rotundatum

Amblyomma sp.

Aplectana sp.

Cosmocercidae larvae

Kalicephalus costatus

Ophiotaenia sp.

Ornithodoros sp.

Physaloptera sp.

Physalopteroides venancioi

Raillietiella furcocerca

Strongyloides ophidiae

Philodryas sp

Amblyomma sp.

Pseudoboa nigra (Duméril, Bibron & Duméril, 1854)

Acanthocephalus sp.

Amblyomma sp.

Hexametra boddaertii

Oligacanthorhynchus sp.

Ophiotaenia sp.

Physaloptera nordestina

Physaloptera sp.

Physalopteroides venancioi

Spilotes pullatus (Linnaeus, 1758)

Amblyomma sp.

Tantilla melanocephala (Linnaeus, 1758)

Amblyomma sp.

Xenodon merremii (Wagler, 1824)

Amblyomma rotundatum

Hastospiculum nordestinum

Physaloptera nordestina

Xenopholis scalaris (Wucherer, 1861)

Amblyomma rotundatum

Amblyomma sp.

Family Viperidae

Bothrops erythromelas Amaral, 1923

Amblyomma rotundatum

Cephalobaena tetrapoda

Physaloptera sp.

Bothrops leucurus (gr. atrox) Wagler, 1824

Amblyomma rotundatum

Amblyomma sp.

Crotalus durissus cascavella Linnaeus, 1758

Amblyomma rotundatum

Lachesis muta (Linnaeus, 1766)

Hastospiculum onchocercum

Porocephalus stilesi

Family Dactyloidae

Anolis brasiliensis Vanzolini & Williams, 1970

Amblyomma sp.

Ohidascaris sp.

Oswaldocruzia bainae

Parapharyngodon sceleratus

Physaloptera retusa

Rhabdias sp.

Skrjabinellazia sp.

Anolis fuscoauratus D'Orbigny, 1837

Aplectana sp.

Centrorhynchus sp.

Cyrtosomum sp.

Mesocoelium monas

Pharyngodon travassosi

Physaloptera sp.

Rhabdias sp.

Skrjabinellazia intermedia

Skrjabinellazia sp.

Strongyloides sp.

Strongyluris oscari

Anolis ortonii Cope, 1868

Haplometroides odhneri

Physaloptera lutzi

Rhabdias sp.

Dactyloa punctata Daudin, 1802

Haplometroides odhneri

Physaloptera lutzi

Skrjabinellazia intermedia

Strongyluris oscari

Family Diploglossidae

Diploglossus lessonae Peracca, 1890

Aplectana sp.

Parapharyngodon verrucosus

Family Gekkonidae

Hemidactylus agrius Vanzolini, 1978

Centrorhynchidae

Oochoristica sp.

Parapharyngodon alvarengai

Physaloptera lutzi

Raillietiella mottae

Skrjabinellazia intermedia

Skrjabinellazia sp.

Spauligodon oxkutzcabiensis

Trichospirura sp.

Hemidactylus brasilianus Amaral, 1935

Oochoristica sp.

Parapharyngodn alvarengai

Physaloptera lutzi

Raillietiella mottae

Skrjabinellazia intermedia

Spauligodon oxkutzcabiensis

Trichospirura sp.

Hemidactylus mabouia (Moreau de Jonnés, 1818)

Centrorhynchidae

Geckobia hemidactyli

Oochoristica sp.

Paradistomum sp.

Parapharyngodon alvarengai

Parapharyngodon sceleratus

Parapharyngodon sp.

Physaloptera retusa

Physalopteroides venancioi

Platynosomum sp.

Plerocercoid larvae

Proteocephalidae

Raillietiella frenata

Raillietiella mottae

Lygodactylus klugei (Smith, Martin & Swain, 1977)

Eutrombicula alfreddugesi

Mesocoelium monas

Parapharyngodon alvarengai

Pharyngodon cesarpintoi

Physaloptera lutzi

Piratuba sp.

Spauligodon oxkutzcabiensis

Strongyluris oscari

Family Gymnophthalmidae

Acratosaura mentalis (Amaral, 1933)

Oochoristica sp.

Parapharyngodon alvarengai

Piratuba sp.

Spauligodon oxkutzcabiensis

Colobosauroides cearensis Cunha, Liima-Verde & lima, 1991

Oochoristica sp.

Oswaldocruzia sp.

Parapharyngodon largitor

Physaloptera sp.

Spauligodon sp.

Dryadosaura nordestina Rodrigues, Xavier Freire, Machado-Pellegrino & Sites, 2005

Aplectana sp.

Cosmocerca sp.

Haplometroides odhneri

Physaloptera lutzi

Micrablepharus maximiliani (Reinhardt & Lütken, 1862)

Oochoristica sp.

Physaloptera lutzi

Raillietiella mottae

Spauligodon sp.

Nothobachia ablephara Rodrigues, 1984

Oochoristica sp.

Parapharyngodon alvarengai

Physaloptera sp.

Procellosaurinus erythrocercus Rodrigues, 1991

Parapharyngodon sp.

Oochoristica sp.

Vanzosaura multiscutata (Amaral, 1933)

Cosmocercidae

Parapharyngodon alvarengai

Pharyngodon cesarpintoi

Physaloptera lutzi

Spauligodon oxkutzcabiensis

Family Iguanidae

Iguana iguana (Linnaeus, 1758)

Alaeuris caudatus

Alaeuris sp.

Alaeuris vogelsangi

Amblyomma dissimile

Amblyomma rotundatum

Atractis sp.

Cosmocercidae larvae

Oswaldofilaria brevicaudata

Ozoalimus sp.

Ozolaimus cirratus

Ozolaimus megatyphlon

Physaloptera sp.

Piratuba sp.

Subulura sp.

Family Leiosauridae

Enyalius bibronii Boulenger, 1885

Physaloptera retusa

Enyalius catenatus (Wied-Neuwied, 1821)

Aplectana sp.

Rhabdias sp.

Family Phyllodactylidae

Gymnodactylus darwinii (Gray, 1845)

Aplectana sp.

Physaloptera sp.

Paradistomum rabusculum

Gymnodactylus geckoides Spix, 1825

Bertrandiella jimenezi

Oligacanthorhynchus sp.

Oochoristica sp.

Parapharyngodon alvarengai

Physaloptera lutzi

Physaloptera sp.

Piratuba sp.

Raillietiella mottae

Spauligodon oxkutzcabiensis

Strongyluris oscari

Trichospirura sp.

Phyllopezus lutzae (Loveridge, 1941)

Spauligodon oxkutzcabiensis

Phyllopezus periosus Rodrigues, 1986

Parapharyngodon alvarengai

Raillietiella mottae

Spauligodon oxkutzcabiensis

Phyllopezus pollicaris (Spix, 1825)

Bertrandiella jimenezi

Oligacanthorhynchus sp.

Oochoristica sp.

Parapharyngodon alvarengai

Parapharyngodon sceleratus

Pharyngodon cesarpintoi

Physaloptera lutzi

Physaloptera retusa

Raillietiella mottae

Skrjabinellazia intermedia

Spauligodon oxkutzcabiensis

Trichospirura sp.

Polychrus acutirostris Spix, 1825

Gynaecometra bahiensis

Physaloptera retusa

Family Scincidae

Brasiliscincus agilis (Raddi, 1823)

Parapharyngodon sceleratus

Physaloptera sp.

Brasiliscincus heathi (Schmidt & Inger, 1951)

Oswaldocruzia sp.

Parapharyngodon alvarengai

Oochoristica sp.

Copeoglossum arajara (Rebouças-Spieker, 1981)

Amblyomma sp.

Parapharyngodon alvarengai

Physaloptera sp.

Physalopteroides venancioi

Raillietiella mottae

Strongyluris oscari

Copeoglossum nigropunctatum (Spix, 1825)

Physaloptera retusa

Psychosaura macrorhyncha (Hoge, 1946)

Echinorhynchidae

Hexametra boddaertii

Oochoristica ameivae

Paradistomum parvissimum

Parapharyngodon sceleratus

Physalopteroides venancioi

Raillietiella sp.

Trachylepis atlantica (Schmidt, 1945)

Eutrombicula alfreddugesi

Mesocoelium monas

Moaciria alvarengai

Oochoristica noronhae

Oochoristica travassosi

Parapharyngodon alvarengai

Platynosomum sp.

Raillietiella freitasi

Spinicauda spinicauda

Family Sphaerodactylidae

Coleodactylus meridionalis (Boulenger, 1888)

Oligacanthorhynchus sp.

Physaloptera lutzi

Haplometroides odhneri

Family Teiidae

Ameiva ameiva (Linnaeus, 1758)

Amblyomma dissimile

Amblyomma sp.

Cruzia sp.

Oligacanthorhynchus sp.

Oochoristica sp.

Parapharyngodon alvarengai

Parapharyngodon sp.

Pharyngodon sp.

Phrayngodon cesarpintoi

Physaloptera lutzi

Raillietiella mottae

Spinicauda amarali

Ameiva sp.

Pharyngodon travassosi

Ameivula nativo (Rocha, Bergallo & Peccinini-Seale, 1997)

Oochoristica ameivae

Parapharyngodon sp.

Physaloptera retusa

Physalopteroides venancioi

Skrjabinelazia intermedia

Subulura lacertília

Ameivula nigrigula (Arias, De Carvalho, Rodrigues & Zaher, 2011)

Ascidae

Eutrombicula alfreddugesi

Mesostigmata

Oochoristica sp.

Pharyngodon cesarpintoi

Physaloptera sp.

Phytoseiidae

Raillietiella sp.

Ameivula ocellifera (Spix, 1825)

Cheyletidae

Cruzia sp.

Eutrombciula alfreddugesi

Glycyphagidae

Hexametra boddaertii

Mesostigmata

Oligacanthorhynchus sp.

Oochoristica sp.

Parapharyngodon alvarengai

Parapharyngodon sp.

Pharyngodon cesarpintoi

Pharyngodon sp.

Physaloptera lutzi

Physaloptera retusa

Physaloptera sp.

Phytoseiidae

Piratuba sp,

Prostigmata

Raillietiella sp.

Spauligodon oxkutzcabiensis

Strongyluris oscari

Tarsonemidae

Ameivula pyrrhogularis (Basto Da Silva & Ávila-Pires, 2013)

Cruzia sp.

Oochoristica travassosi

Parapharyngodon sp.

Physaloptera sp.

Physalopteroides venancioi

Glaucomastix abaetensis (Reis Dias, Rocha & Vrcibradic, 2002)

Hexametra boddaertii

Physaloptera sp.

Physaloptera lutzi

Physaloptera retusa

Kentropyx calcarata Spix, 1825

Eutrombicula sp.

Pharyngodon sp.

Physaloptera lutzi

Physaloptera retusa

Piratuba sp.

Salvator merianae Duméril & Bibron, 1839

Cruzia sp.

Cruzia travassosi

Diaphanocephalus galeatus

Oochoristica sp.

Oswaldofilaria petersi

Pharyngodon cesarpintoi

Physaloptera lutzi

Physaloptera retusa

Physaloptera tupinambae

Spinicauda spinicauda

Tupinambis teguixin (Linnaeus, 1758)

Spinicauda spinicauda

Family Tropiduridae

Eurolophosaurus amathites (Rodrigues, 1984)

Physaloptera lutzi

Eurolophosaurus divaricatus (Rodrigues, 1986)

Physaloptera lutzi

Strobilurus torquatus Wiegmann, 1834

Eutrombicula alfreddugesi

Physaloptera lutzi

Physaloptera retusa

Spauligodon loboi

Strongyluris oscari

Tropidurus cocorobensis Rodrigues, 1987

Eutrombicula alfreddugesi

Eutrombicula aff. alfreddugesi

Tropidurus erythrocephalus Rodrigues, 1987

Eutrombicula alfreddugesi

Eutrombicula aff. alfreddugesi

Tropidurus hispidus (Spix, 1825)

Amblyomma dissimile

Amblyomma rotundatum

Amblyommma sp.

Euparadistomum paraense

Eutrombicula aff. alfreddugesi

Eutrombicula alfreddugesi

Geckobiella harrisi

Geckobiella sp.

Haplometroides odhneri

Hexamtra boddaertii

Oligacanthorhynchus sp.

Oochoristica bresslaui

Oochoristica sp.

Oswaldocruzia sp.

Oswaldocruzia subauricularis

Oswaldofilaria petersi

Oswaldofilaria sp.

Parapharyngodon alvarengai

Parapharyngodon hispidus

Parapharyngodon sceleratus

Parapharyngodon sp.

Parapharyngodon verrucosus

Pharyngodon cesarpintoi

Pharyngodon sp.

Physaloptera lutzi

Physaloptera retusa

Physaloptera sp.

Physalopteroides venancioi

Piratuba digiticauda

Piratuba sp.

Raillietiella mottae

Rhabdias sp.

Spauligodon oxkutzcabiensis

Strongyluris oscari

Tropidurus hygomi Reinhardt & Lütken, 1862

Physaloptera lutzi

Tropidurus jaguaribanus Passos, Lima & Borges-Nojosa, 2011

Oochoristica trabassosi

Parapharyngodon alvarengai

Physaloptera lutzi

Physaloptera sp.

Spauligodon sp.

Strongyluris oscari

Tropidurus psammonastes Rodrigues, Kasahara, Yonenaga-Yassuda, 1988

Physaloptera lutzi

Tropidurus semitaeniatus (Spix, 1825)

Cosmocercidae

Eutrombicula aff. afreddugesi

Eutrombicula afreddugesi

Oligacanthorhynchus sp.

Oochoristica bresslaui

Parapharyngdon sceleratus

Parapharyngodpn sp.

Pharyngodon cesarpintoi

Physaloptera lutzi

Physaloptera retusa

Physaloptera sp.

Piratuba sp.

Raillietiella mottae

Spauligodon loboi

Strongyluris oscari

Trichospirura sp.

Tropidurus sp.

Amblyomma sp.

Tropidurus torquatus (Wied-Neuwied, 1820)

Eutrombicula alfreddugesi

Oochoristica bresslaui

Paradistomum parvissimum

Parapharyngodon sceleratus

Parapharyngodon sp.

Pharyngodon sp.

Physaloptera lutzi

Physaloptera retusa

Piratuba digiticauda

Raillietiella freitasi

Skrjabinellazia intermedia

Strongyluris oscari

Discussion

Our data indicate that lizards had the highest number of records, diversity and parasite richness (fig. 3) with around the 110 taxa (51% of total taxa reported in this study) registered for 56 of the 134 species (41% of the lizard species that occur in the region), mostly belonging to the family Tropiduridae and the genus Tropidurus.

Fig. 3. Percentage of the main parasitic groups found in each reptile group investigated.

The nematodes were most frequent helminths in the reptiles of Northeast Brazil, and the genera Parapharyngodon and Physaloptera were most common. Parapharyngodon species are gastrointestinal parasites that are found mainly in insectivorous reptiles (Adamson, Reference Adamson1981), with lizards as their main hosts (Morsy et al., Reference Morsy, Al-Kahtani, Shati, El-Kott, Abdel-Gaber and Fol2019). In Northeast Brazil they inhabited around 24 species of lizards from six different families. In many cases, the hosts harboured more than one species, most commonly with more than one parasite species of the genus in the same host (Pereira et al., Reference Pereira, Campião, Luque and Tavares2017). Physaloptera species are parasites common in the stomach and muscles of mammals, reptiles, amphibians and birds (Kalyanasundaram et al., Reference Kalyanasundaram, Henry, Brym and Kendall2018). For Northeast Brazil the species P. retusa was the most reported, infecting 17 species from two distinct groups (testudines and lizards).

The ectoparasite Amblyomma rotundatum was the most frequently occurring in north-eastern reptiles, parasitizing 26 distinct species, and was present in the four investigated snake families. Amblyomma has the greatest diversity of species, represented by about 138 of which 32 are recorded in Brazil, and has the greatest range of related hosts (Fonseca et al., Reference Fonseca, Lima, Souza, Silva, Lima, Oliveira, Moura and Aléssio2017; Alcantara et al. Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Sousa, Ávila and Morais2018a). Amblyomma rotundatum is commonly found parasitizing anuran amphibians (such as Rhinella crucifer, Rhinella diptycha, Rhinella granulosa, Rhinella gildae and Rhinella marina) (Santos et al., Reference Santos, Botelho and De Oliveira2002; Horta et al., Reference Horta, Saraiva, Oliveira, Martins and Labruna2015; Alcantara et al. Reference Alcantara, Ferreira-Silva, Ávila, Pacheco, Martins, Muñoz-Leal and Morais2018b). Mites and monogenetic and digenetic trematodes presented the least parasitic diversity in the reptiles from Northeast Brazil.

In general, the data obtained indicate that the distribution of information for each group reflects the abundance and ease of capturing the hosts. This explains the greater number of studies on lizards, which in general are abundant and easy to capture, unlike animals with secretive habits or with lower density, such as snakes and amphisbaenians.

Conclusion

The parasitic fauna of reptiles from Northeast Brazil is composed predominantly of nematodes. Vicente et al. (Reference Vicente, Rodrigues, Gomes and Pinto1993) catalogued information for 90 species of reptiles from Brazil, and Ávila & Silva (Reference Ávila and Silva2010) recorded data for about 118 species of lizards and five amphisbaenians from South America. In the current paper, cases of parasitism were reported for 101 species, which corresponds to just over 23% of the species that occur in Northeast Brazil. There is a growing interest in the investigation of parasite communities in reptiles and other vertebrate hosts, which reflects the establishment of new research groups interested in these topics at the beginning of the twenty-first century. In recent years, about four parasitic species have been described from reptiles from Northeast Brazil, demonstrating the region's potential richness of parasitic fauna. We believe that the current paper presents a comprehensive overview of information about the parasitic fauna of reptiles in Northeast Brazil, presenting the gaps standing out for being exclusively focused on the region, which in the past was framed by scholars in the category of poor in biodiversity, but which on the contrary is so rich in reptile species and has been shown to be equally diverse in terms of parasitic fauna.

Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful to the Instituto de Formação de Educadores (IFE), Universidade Federal do Cariri (UFCA) and Universidade Regional do Cariri (URCA). We also thank Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) and Fundação Cearense de Apoio ao Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (FUNCAP).

Financial support

Fundação Cearense de Apoio ao Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (FUNCAP) by means of Programa Institucional de Iniciação Científica e Tecnológica (PIICT) of the Universidade Federal do Cariri (BP4-0172-00223.01.00/20) and Programa de Pós-Graduação em Diversidade Biológica e Recursos Naturais of the Universidade Regional do Cariri (BMD-0008-00643.01.23/21).

Conflicts of interest

None.

Ethical standards

None.

References

Adamson, ML (1981) Parapharyngodon osteopili n. sp. (Pharyngodonidae: Oxyuroidea) and a revision of Parapharyngodon and Thelandros. Systematic Parasitology 3(1), 105117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alcantara, EP, Ferreira-Silva, C, Sousa, JGG, Ávila, RW and Morais, DH (2018a) Ecology and parasitism of the Tropidurus jaguaribanus (Squamata: Tropiduridae) from northeastern Brazil. Phyllomedusa 17(1519–1397), 195210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alcantara, EP, Ferreira-Silva, C, Ávila, RW, Pacheco, RDEC, Martins, TF, Muñoz-Leal, S and Morais, DH (2018b) Ticks (Acari: Argasidae and Ixodidae) infesting amphibians and reptiles in Northeastern Brazil. Systematic & Applied Acarology 23(8), 14971508.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alcantara, EP, Ferreira-Silva, C, Gonçalves-Sousa, JG, Morais, DH and Ávila, RW (2019) Feeding ecology, reproductive biology, and parasitismo de Gymnodactylus geckoides Spix, 1825 from a Caatinga area in Northeastern Brazil. Herpetological Conservation and Biology 14(3), 641647.Google Scholar
Almeida, WO, Brito, SV, Ferreira, FS and Christoffersen, ML (2006a) First record of Cephalobaena tetrapoda (Pentastomida: Cephalobaenidae) as a parasite on Liophis lineatus (Ophidia: Colubridae) in Northeast Brazil. Brazilian Journal of Biology 66(2), 559564.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Almeida, WO, Ferreira, FS, Brito, SV and Christoffersen, ML (2006b) Raillietiella gigliolii (Pentastomida) infecting Amphisbaena alba (Squamata, Amphisbaenidae): the first record for northeast Brazil. Brazilian Journal of Biology 66(4), 11371139.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Almeida, WO, Vasconcellos, A, Lopes, SG and Freire, EMX (2007) Prevalence and intensity of pentastomid infection in two species of snakes from Northeastern Brazil. Brazilian Journal of Biology 67(4), 759763.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Almeida, WO, Guedes, TB, Freire, EMX and Vasconcellos, A (2008a) Pentastomid infection in Philodryas nattereri Steindachner, 1870 and Oxybelis aeneus (Wagler, 1824) (Squamata: Colubridae) in a Caatinga of northeastern Brazil. Brazilian Journal of Biology 68(1), 193197.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Almeida, WdeO, Ferreira, FS, Guarnieri, MC and Brito, SV (2008b) Porocephalus species (Pentastomida) infecting Boa constrictor (Boidae) and Lachesis muta (Viperidae) in northeastern Brazil. Biotemas 21(2), 165168.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Almeida, WO, Santana, GG, Vieira, WLS and Wanderley, IC (2008c) Infection rates of pentastomids on lizards in urban habitats in the Brazilian northeast. Brazilian Journal of Biology 68(4), 885888.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Almeida, WO, Santana, GG, Vieira, WLS, Wanderley, IC and Ribeiro, SC (2009a) Rates of pulmonary infection by pentastomids in lizards species from a restinga habitat in northeastern Brazil. Brazilian Journal of Biology 69(1), 197200.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Almeida, WO, Sales, DL, Santana, GG, Vieira, WLS, Ribeiro, SC, Alves, RRN and Nóbrega, RP (2009b) Prevalence and intensity of infection by Raillietiella gigliolii Hett, 1924 (Pentastomida) in Amphisbaena alba Linnaeus, 1758 and A. vermicularis Wagler, 1824 (Amphisbaenidae) from Northeastern Brazil. Brazilian Journal of Biology 69(4), 11831186.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Almeida, WO, Ribeiro, SC, Santana, GG, Vieira, WLS, Anjos, LA and Sales, DL (2009c) Lung infection rates in two sympatric Tropiduridae lizard species by pentastomids and nematodes in northeastern Brazil. Brazilian Journal of Biology 69(3), 963967.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Amin, OM (2013) Classification of the Acanthocephala. Folia Parasitologica 60(4), 273305.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Amorim, DM and Ávila, RW (2019) Infection patterns of helminths in Norops brasiliensis (Squamata, Dactyloidae) from a humid forest, Northeastern Brazil and their relation with body mass, sex, host size, and season. Helminthologia 56(2), 168174.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Amorim, DMde, Oliveira, RHDE, Silva, CF and Ávila, RW (2014) Leposternon polystegum. Endoparasites. Herpetological Review 45(1), 697.Google Scholar
Amorim, DD, Silva, LD, Morais, DH, Silva, RJ and Avila, RW (2017) Aplectana nordestina n. sp. (Nematoda: cosmocercidae) parasitizing Leposternon polystegum (Squamata: Amphisbaenidae) from Northeastern, Brazil. Zootaxa 4247(1), 8388.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amorim, DM, Perez, R, Ávila, RW and De Moura, GJB (2019) Diet and parasitism in Leposternon polystegum (Amphisbaenia, Amphisbaenidae) from coastal areas in the Brazilian Northeast. Journal of Natural History 53(29-30), 17991809.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anderson, RC, Chabaud, AG and Willmott, S (2009) Keys to the nematodes parasites of vertebrates. Wallingford, UK, CABI International.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andreotti, R, Koller, WW and Garcia, MV (2016) Carrapatos: protocolos e técnicas para estudo [Ticks: protocols and techniques for study]. 240 pp. Brasília, DF, Embrapa. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Anjos, LA, Almeida, WO, Vasconcellos, A, Freire, EMX and Rocha, CFD (2008) Pentastomids infecting an invader lizard, Hemidactylus mabouia (Gekkonidae) in northeastern Brazil. Brazilian Journal of Biology 68(3), 611615.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Anjos, LAdos, Holanda Bezerra, C, Cunha Passos, D, Zanchi, D and Barbosa Galdino, CA (2011) Helminth fauna of two gecko lizards, Hemidactylus agrius and Lygodactylus klugei (Gekkonidade), from Caatinga biome, northeastern Brazil. Neotropical Helminthology 5(2), 285290.Google Scholar
Anjos, LA, Ávila, RW, Ribeiro, SC, Almeida, WO and da Silva, RJ (2012) Gastrointestinal nematodes of the lizard Tropidurus hispidus (Squamata: Tropiduridae) from a semi-arid region of north-eastern Brazil. Journal of Helminthology 87(4), 443449.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Araujo-Filho, JD, Oliveira, CR, Ávila, RW, Roberto, IJ and Almeida, WO (2013) Lachesis muta (Surucucu, Atlantic Forest Bushmaster) parasitism. Herpetological Review 44(4), 692.Google Scholar
Araújo, P (1976) Um novo Oxyurideo n. gen. n. sp. (Nematoda: Oxyuroidea: Oxyuridae) encontrado em lacertílio [A new Oxyuride n. gen. no. sp. (Nematoda: Oxyuroidea: Oxyuridae) found in lacertilium]. Memórias do Instituto Butantan 40(1), 251257. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Araújo, D (2014) Trepadeiras do bioma Caatinga [Creepers of the Caatinga biome]. pp. 3557. In Villagra, BLP, Melo, MMRF, Romaniuc-Neto, S and Barbosa, LM (Eds) Diversidade e conservação de trepadeiras: contribuições para a restauração de ecossistemas brasileiros [Diversity and conservation of vines: contributions to the restoration of Brazilian ecosystems]. São Paulo, Imprensa Deicial do Estado de São Paulo. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Araujo Filho, JA, Ribeiro, SC, Brito, SV, Teles, DA, Sousa, JGG, Ávila, RW and Almeida, WO (2014) Parasitic nematodes of Polychrus acutirostris (Polychrotidae) in the Caatinga biome, Northeastern Brazil. Brazilian Journal of Biology 74(4), 939942.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Araujo Filho, JA, Brito, SV, Lima, VF, Pereira, AMA, Mesquita, DO, Albuquerque, RL and Almeida, WO (2017) Influence of temporal variation and host condition on helminth abundance in the lizard Tropidurus hispidus from north-eastern Brazil. Journal of Helminthology 91(3), 312319.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Araújo Filho, JA, Teles, DA, Teixeira, AAM, Sakamoto, ACFL, Pinto, CLdeM, Silva, EGda and Almeida, WdeO (2018) Philodryas naterreri (run-snake). Endoparasites. Herpetological Review 49(1), 138.Google Scholar
Araújo Filho, JA, Teixeira, AAM, Teles, DA, Rocha, SM, Almeida, WO, Mesquita, DO and Lacerda, ACF (2020) Using lizards to evaluate the influence of average abundance on the variance of endoparasites in semiarid areas: dispersion and assemblage structure. Journal of Helminthology 94(1), 112.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ávila, RW and Silva, RJ (2010) Checklist of helminths from lizards and amphisbaenians (Reptilia, Squamata) of South America. Journal of Venomous Animals and Toxins Including Tropical Diseases 16(4), 543572.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ávila, RW, Anjos, LA, Gonçalves, U, Freire, EMX, Almeida, WO and da Silva, RJ (2010a) Nematode infection in the lizard Bogertia lutzae (Loveridge, 1941) from the Atlantic forest in north-eastern Brazil. Journal of Helminthology 84(2), 199201.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ávila, RW, Souza, FL and Da Silva, RJ (2010b) Helminths from seven species de lizards (Reptilia: Squamata) at the Cerrado de Mato Grosso do Sul State, Brazil. Comparative Parasitology 77(1), 6771.Google Scholar
Ávila, RW, Anjos, LA, Ribeiro, SC, Morais, DH, da Silva, RJ and Almeida, WO (2012) Nematodes of lizards (Reptilia: Squamata) from Caatinga biome, northeastern Brazil. Comparative Parasitology 79(1), 5663.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bain, O (1974) Description de nouvelles filaires Oswaldofilariinae de lezards sud-americains; hypothese sur l'evolution des filaires de reptiles [Description of new Oswaldofilariinae filariae from South American lizards; hypothesis on the evolution of reptile filariae]. Bulletin du Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle Paris 208(3), 169200. [In French.]Google Scholar
Barros-Battesti, DM, Arzua, M and Bechara, GH (2006) Carrapatos de importância médico veterinária da região neotropical: um guia ilustrado para identificação de espécies [Ticks of veterinary medical importance of the neotropics: an illustrated guide to species identification]. 223 pp. São Paulo, ICTTD-3, Instituto Butantan. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Batista, AIV, de Lucena, GVC, de Oliveira Filho, KS, Nery, TFL, Martins, TF and Pereira, JS (2021) Occurrence of Amblyomma rotundatum Koch, 1844 in Epicrates assisi Machado, 1945 in João Pessoa, Paraíba, Brazil. Acta Veterinaria Brasilica 15(4), 335338.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bezerra, CH, Pinheiro, LT, Melo, GC, Braga, RR, Anjos, LAD and Borges-Nojosa, DM (2020) How epidemiological patterns shift across populations in an exotic lizard. Journal of Helminthology 94(1), 16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boas, AHV, De Vasconcelos Camargo, F, Junqueira, ÁFB, Venturelli, OG and Albo, R (2014) Levantamento preliminar da herpetofauna em um fragmento de mata Atlântica no Observatório Picos dos Dias, Brasópolis, Minas Gerais [Preliminary survey of herpetofauna in an Atlantic forest fragment at the Picos dos Dias Observatory, Brasópolis, Minas Gerais]. Revista Universitas Científica 3(2), 15.Google Scholar
BRASIL (2017) Biomas. Ministério do Meio Ambiente [Biomes. Ministry of the Environment]. Available at https://antigo.mma.gov.br/biomas.html?view=default (accessed 20 April 2022). [in Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Breves, P, Porto, M, Pissinatti, A, Luz, D and Menezes, RC (2011) Helmintos oxiuridae parasitos de Iguana iguana (Squamata, Lacertilia, Iguanidae) procedentes do Brasil [Oxyuridae helminths parasites of Iguana iguana (Squamata, Lacertilia, Iguanidae) from Brazil]. Arquivo Brasileiro de Medicina Veterinária e Zootecnia 63(6), 15741578. [In Portuguese.]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brito, SV, Almeida, WO, Anjos, LA and Silva, RJ (2012) New host records of Brazilian pentastomid species. Brazilian Journal of Biology 72(2), 393396.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Brito, SV, Ferreira, FS, Ribeiro, SC, Anjos, LA, Almeida, WO, Mesquita, DO and Vasconcellos, A (2014a) Spatial-temporal variation of parasites in Cnemidophorus ocellifer (Teiidae) and Tropidurus hispidus and Tropidurus semitaeniatus (Tropiduridae) from Caatinga areas in northeastern Brazil. Parasitology Research 113(3), 11631169.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Brito, SV, Corso, G, Almeida, AM, Ferreira, FS, Almeida, WO, Anjos, LA, Mesquita, DO and Vasconcellos, A (2014b) Phylogeny and micro-habitats utilized by lizards determine the composition of their endoparasites in the semiarid Caatinga of Northeast Brazil. Parasitology Research 113(11), 39633972.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bursey, CR, Rocha, CFD, Menezes, VA, Ariani, CV and Vrcibradic, D (2010) New species of Oochoristica (Cestoda; Linstowiidae) and other endoparasites of Trachylepis atlantica (Sauria: Scincidae) from Fernando de Noronha Island, Brazil. Zootaxa 2715(1), 4554.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cabral, ADN, Teles, DA, Brito, SV, Almeida, WDO, Dos Anjos, LA, Guarnieri, MC and Ribeiro, SC (2018) Helminth parasites of Mabuya arajara Rebouças-Spieker, 1981 (Lacertilia: Mabuyidae) from Chapada do Araripe, northeastern Brazil. Parasitology Research 117(4), 11851193.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Carlson, CJ, Dallas, TA, Alexander, LW, Phelan, AL and Phillips, AJ (2020) What would it take to describe the global diversity of parasites? Proceedings of the Royal Society B 287(1939), 20201841.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Carvalho, ED, Silva-Neta, AFD, Silva, CDS, Oliveira, CR, Nunes, JDCX, Souza, TG and Ávila, RW (2018) Helminths infecting the cat-eyed snake Leptodeira annulata Linnaeus 1758 (Squamata: Dipsadidae) in a semiarid region of Brazil. Helminthologia 55(4), 281285.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Castro Araújo, Kde, Silva, CdeS, Machado, HTdeS, Oliveira, CRde and Ávila, RW (2020) Endoparasites of Philodryas olfersii (Lichtenstein, 1823) in restinga environments of the Parnaíba river delta, northeastern Brazil. Neotropical Helminthology 14(2), 129141.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christoffersen, ML and De Assis, JE (2013) A systematic monograph of the Recent Pentastomida, with a compilation of their hosts. Zoologische Mededelingen 87(1), 1206.Google Scholar
Costa, HC, Guedes, TB and Bérbils, RS (2021) Lista de répteis do Brasil: padrões e tendências [List of Brazilian reptiles: patterns and trends]. Herpetologia Brasileira 10(3), 110279. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Cuellar, I, Sáez, G, Cantú, S, Sánchez, L, Mendoza, C, Conga, DF, Cruces, CL, Luque, JL and Chero, JD (2022) A checklist of helminths associated with reptiles (Tetrapoda: Reptilia) from Peru. Journal of Helminthology 96(1), 111.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cunha, MCAL, Farias, AMI, Brito, FLC and Serra-Freire, NM (1999) Ocorrência de Amblyomma fuscum Neumann, 1907 (Acari: Ixodidae) em Boa constrictor Linnaeus, 1758 (Reptilia: Boidae) no estado de Pernambuco, Brasil [Occurrence of Amblyomma fuscum Neumann, 1907 (Acari: Ixodidae) in Boa constrictor Linnaeus, 1758 (Reptilia: Boidae) in the state of Pernambuco, Brazil]. Entomología y Vectores 6(5), 577579. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Cunha, MdaCdeAeLda, Farias, AMIde, Brito, FLdaC and Serra-Freire, NM (2003) Intensidade de parasitismo em Amblyomma rotundatum Koch, 1844 (Acari: Ixodidae) em serpentes da família Boidae capturadas no Parque Dois Irmãos, Recife, Pernambuco, Brasil [Intensity of parasitism in Amblyomma rotundatum Koch, 1844 (Acari: Ixodidae) in snakes of the family Boidae captured at Parque Dois Irmãos, Recife, Pernambuco, Brazil]. Entomología y Vectores 10(1), 2129. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Dallas, T, Holian, L and Foster, G (2020) What determines parasite species richness across host species? Journal of Animal Ecology 89(8), 17501753.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dantas-Torres, F, Oliveira-Filho, EF, Souza, BOF and , FB (2005) First record of Amblyomma rotundatum Koch, 1844 (Acari: Ixodidae) parasitizing Crotalus durissus cascavella (Wagler, 1824) (Squamata: Viperidae) in the state de Pernambuco, Brazil. Arquivos do Instituto Biológico São Paulo 72(3), 389390.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dantas-Torres, F, Oliveira-Filho, EF, Soares, FÂM, Souza, BO, Valença, RBP and , FB (2008) Ticks infesting amphibians and reptiles in Pernambuco, Northeastern Brazil. Revista Brasileira de Parasitologia Veterinária 17(4), 218221.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dantas-Torres, F, Ferreira, DR, de Melo, LM, Lima, PAC, Siqueira, DB, Rameh-de-Albuquerque, LC, Melo, AVde and Ramos, JA (2010) Ticks on captive and free-living wild animals in northeastern Brazil. Experimental and Applied Acarology 50(2), 181189.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dantas-Torres, F, Aléssio, FM, Siqueira, DB, et al. (2012) Exposure of small mammals to ticks and rickettsiae in Atlantic Forest patches in the metropolitan area of Recife, North-eastern Brazil. Parasitology 139(1), 8391.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dantas-Torres, F, Mascarenhas-Junior, PB, Dos Anjos, HR, Dos Santos, EM and Correia, JMS (2019) Tick infestation on caimans: a casual tick–host association in the Atlantic rainforest biome? Experimental and Applied Acarology 79(3–4), 411420.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Delfino, MMS, Ribeiro, SC, Furtado, IP, Anjos, LA and Almeida, WO (2011) Ácaros Pterygosomatidae e Trombiculidae infestando lagartos Tropidurus hispidus (Spix, 1825) (Tropiduridae) no nordeste do Brasil [Pterygosomatidae and Trombiculidae mites infesting Tropidurus hispidus (Spix, 1825) lizards (Tropiduridae) in northeastern Brazil]. Brazilian Journal of Biology 71(2), 549555. [In Portuguese.]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dias, EJR, Vrcibradic, D and Rocha, CFD (2005) Endoparasites infecting two species of whiptail lizard (Cnemidophorus abaetensis and C. ocellifer; Teiidae) in a restinga habitat of north-eastern Brazil. The Herpetological Journal 15(1), 133137.Google Scholar
Fernandes, BMM and Kohn, A (2014) South American trematodes parasites of amphibians and reptiles. 228 pp. Rio de Janeiro, Oficina de Livros.Google Scholar
Ferreira, ACS, Vieira, FM, Ribeiro, LB, Muniz Pereira, LC and Nunes da Silva, DC (2020a) Helminths parasitizing Procellosaurinus erythrocercus, a little-known Neotropical lizard endemic to Brazilian semiarid Caatinga biome. Journal of Wildlife Diseases 56(4), 947949.Google Scholar
Ferreira, CS, Alcantara, EP, Avila, RW and Silva, RJ (2020b) A new species of Hastospiculum Skrjabin (Spirurida: Diplotriaenidae) parasite of Xenodon merremii (Walger in Spix) (Serpentes: Dipsadidae) from Northeastern Brazil. Zootaxa 4878(2), 362374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferreira, ACS, Vieira, FM, Da Silva, DCN, Ribeiro, LB, Ferreira, JA and Muniz-Pereira, LC (2021) Parapharyngodon hispidus n. sp. (Nematoda: Pharyngodonidae) in Tropidurus hispidus (Spix) (Squamata: Tropiduridae) from Caatinga Biome of the Vale do São Francisco, state of Pernambuco, Brazil with a key for the Neotropical species of the genus Parapharyngodon Chatterji. Zootaxa 4980(1), 185200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fonseca, CFD, Lima, DCde, Souza, DDS, Silva, SGda, Lima, JRde, Oliveira, JBD, Moura, CJBde and Aléssio, FM (2017) Distribuição espacial e abundância de carrapatos (Acari: Ixodidae) em remanescente de Mata Atlântica, Nordeste do Brasil [Spatial distribution and abundance of ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) in Atlantic Forest remnants, Northeast Brazil]. Pesquisa Veterinária Brasileira 37(10), 10851090. [In Portuguese.]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fonseca, MS, Bahiense, TC, Silva, AAB, et al. (2020) Ticks and associated pathogens from rescued wild animals in rainforest fragments of northeastern Brazil. Frontiers in Veterinary Science 7(1), 177.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fonseca, CFda, Rojas, NJJT, Vieira, FM, dos Santos Ferreira, AP, Da Silva Rodrigues, M, De Barros, MEG, Júnior, VAdaS, Moura, GJBde and de Oliveira, JB (2021) Helminth fauna and histopathology associated with parasitic infections in Phrynops geoffroanus (Schweigger, 1812) (Testudines, Chelidae) in a Brazilian river subjected to anthropogenic activities. Veterinary Parasitology: Regional Studies and Reports 26(1), 100639.Google Scholar
Freitas, JFdeT (1957) Sobre os gêneros Thelandros Wedl, 1862 e Parapharyngodon Chatterji, 1933, com descrição de Parapharyngodon alvarengai sp. n. (Nematoda, Oxyuroidea) [On the genera Thelandros Wedl, 1862 and Parapharyngodon Chatterji, 1933, with description of Parapharyngodon alvarengai sp. no. (Nematoda, Oxyuroidea)]. Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz 55(1), 2245. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Freitas, MA de (2011). Anfíbios do Nordeste Brasileiro. Mata Atlântica, Caatinga, Cerrado, Zona Costeira, Amazônia. 84 p. (Produção do autor)Google Scholar
Galdino, CA, Ávila, RW, Bezerra, CH, Passos, DC, Melo, GC and Zanchi-Silva, D (2014) Helminths infection patterns in a lizard (Tropidurus hispidus) population from a semiarid Neotropical area: associations between female reproductive allocation and parasite loads. Journal of Parasitology 100(6), 864867.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garcia, C (2017) O que é nordeste brasileiro. coleção primeiros passos, 119, 1 edição eBook [What is northeast Brazil? First steps collection, 119, 1 eBook edition]. São Paulo, Brasiliense. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Gómez, A and Nichols, E (2013) Neglected wild life: parasitic biodiversity as a conservation target. International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife 2(2), 222227.Google ScholarPubMed
González, CEG, Hamann, MI and Duré, MI (2021) Nematodes of amphibians from the South American Chaco: distribution, host specificity and ecological aspects. Diversity 13(7), 321.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horta, MC, Do Nascimento, GF, Martins, TF, Labruna, MB, Machado, LC and Nicola, PA (2011) Ticks (Acari: Ixodida) parasitizing free-living wild animals in the Caatinga biome in the State of Pernambuco, northeastern Brazil. Systematic and Applied Acarology 16(3), 207211.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horta, MC, Saraiva, DG, Oliveira, GM, Martins, TF and Labruna, MB (2015) Rickettsia bellii in Amblyomma rotundatum ticks parasitizing Rhinella jimi from northeastern Brazil. Microbes and Infection 17(11–12), 856858.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kalyanasundaram, A, Henry, C, Brym, MZ and Kendall, RJ (2018) Molecular identification of Physaloptera sp. from wild northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) in the Rolling Plains ecoregion of Texas. Parasitology Research 117(9), 29632969.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kohn, A, Pinto, RM and Fernandes, BMM (1973) Contribuição ao conhecimento de strongyluris oscari Travassos, 1923 (Nematoda, Subuluroidea). Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz 71(3), 219225.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Labruna, MB, Ahid, SMM, Soares, HS and Suassuna, ACD (2007) Hyperparasitism in Amblyomma rotundatum (Acari: Ixodidae). Journal of Parasitology 93(6), 15311532.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lambertz, M, Kohlsdorf, T, Perry, S, Ávila, R and da Silva, R (2012) First assessment of the endoparasitic nematode fauna of four psammophilous species of Tropiduridae (Squamata: Iguania) endemic to north-eastern Brazil. Acta Herpetologica 7(2), 315323.Google Scholar
Lima, VF, Brito, SV, Araújo, JA, Teles, DA, Ribeiro, SC, Teixeira, AAM, Pereira, AMA and Almeida, WO (2017) Helminth parasites of Phyllodactylidae and Gekkonidae lizards in a Caatinga ecological station, northeastern Brazil. Biota Neotropica 17(174), 20160263-2017.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lima, VF, Brito, SV, Araújo Filho, JA, Teles, DA, Ribeiro, SC, Teixeira, AAM, Pereira, AMA and Almeida, WO (2018) Raillietiella mottae (Pentastomida: Raillietiellidae) parasitizing four species of Gekkota lizards (Gekkonidae and Phyllodactylidae) in the Brazilian Caatinga. Helminthologia 55(2), 140145.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lopes, SG, Silva, LEM, Datas, EF and Almeida, WO (2007) Infecção por helmintos em três espécies de lagartos do nordeste brasileiro [Helminth infection in three lizard species from northeastern Brazil]. Cadernos de Cultura e Ciência 1(1), 19. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Lopes, SG, Andrade, GVD and Costa-Júnior, LM (2010) A first record of Amblyomma dissimile (Acari: Ixodidae) parasitizing the lizard Ameiva ameiva (Teiidae) in Brazil. Revista Brasileira de Parasitologia Veterinária 19(4), 262264.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lunaschi, LI and Drago, FB (2007) Checklist of digenean parasites of amphibians and reptiles from Argentina. Zootaxa 1476(1), 5168.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maia-Carneiro, T, Motta-Tavares, T, Ávila, RW and Rocha, CF (2018) Helminth infections in a pair of sympatric congeneric lizard species. Parasitology Research 117(1), 8996.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martins, TF, Onofrio, VC, Barros-Battesti, DM and Labruna, MB (2010) Nymphs of the genus Amblyomma (Acari: Ixodidae) of Brazil: descriptions, redescriptions, and identification key. Tick and Tick-Borne Diseases 1(2), 7599.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Matias, CS, Silva, C, Sousa, JG and Ávila, R (2018) Helminths infecting the black false boa Pseudoboa nigra (Squamata: Dipsadidae) in northeastern Brazil. Acta Herpetologica 13(2), 171175.Google Scholar
Matias, CSL, Morais, DH and Avila, RW (2020) Physaloptera nordestina n. sp. (Nematoda: Physalopteridae) parasitizing snakes from Northeastern Brazil. Zootaxa 4766(1), 173180.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Melo, VLde, Oliveira, JBde, Faria, RG and Moura, GJBde (2019) Gastrointestinal parasites of Salvator merianae Duméril & Bibron, 1839 (Squamata, Teiidae) in the States of Ceará and Sergipe, Northeastern of Brazil. Herpetology Notes 12(1), 457460.Google Scholar
Mendoza-Roldan, J, Ribeiro, SR, Castilho-Onofrio, V, et al. (2020) Mites and ticks of reptiles and amphibians in Brazil. Acta Tropica 208(1), 105515.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Menezes, VA, Vrcibradic, D, Vicente, JJ, Dutra, GF and Rocha, CFD (2004) Helminths infecting the parthenogenetic whiptail lizard Cnemidophorus nativo in a restinga habitat of Bahia State, Brazil. Journal of Helminthology 78(4), 323328.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Menezes, VA, Fontes, AF, Gettinger, D, Van Sluys, M and Rocha, CFD (2011) A morphometric study of Eutrombicula alfreddugesi (Acari: Trombiculidae) infesting four sympatric species of Tropidurus (Squamata: Tropiduridae) in northeastern Brazil. Phyllomedusa 10(1), 7984.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mesquita, JMdosS, Oliveira, SSde, Perez, R and Ávila, RW (2020) Helminths associated with Norops fuscoauratus (Squamata, Dactyloidae) in Highland marshes of the Brazilian semi-arid. Journal of Helminthology 94(1), 17.Google Scholar
Miranda, C (1924) Alguns nematódeos do género Aplectana Railliet & Henry, 1916 [Some nematodes of the genus Aplectana Railliet & Henry, 1916]. Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz 17(1), 4554. [In Portuguese.]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miranda, EBPde (2017) The plight of reptiles as ecological actors in the tropics. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 15(1), 159.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Molion, LCB and Bernardo, SdeO (2002) Uma revisão da dinâmica das chuvas no nordeste brasileiro [A review of rainfall dynamics in northeastern Brazil]. Revista Brasileira de Meteorologia 17(1), 110. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Morsy, K, Al-Kahtani, M, Shati, A, El-Kott, A, Abdel-Gaber, R and Fol, M (2019) New host and locality record of Parapharyngodon japonicus (Nematoda: Oxyuroidea) from the Egyptian changeable lizard Agama mutabilis (Agamidae): a light and scanning electron microscopy. Helminthologia 56(1), 2229.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Muniz-Pereira, LC, Vieira, FM and Luque, JL (2009) Checklist of helminth parasites of threatened vertebrate species from Brazil. Zootaxa 2123(1), 145.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nascimento, JMdo, Araujo-Filho, JAde, Sampaio, NKS, Brito, SV and Almeida, WO (2020) Description of the egg and larva of (Pentastomida: Raillietiellidae). Helminthologia 57(3), 268275.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nava, S, Venzal, JM, González-Acuña, D, Martins, TF and Guglielmone, AA (2017) Ticks of the Southern Cone of America: diagnosis, distribution, and hosts with taxonomy, ecology and sanitary importance. 372 pp. London, Academic Press.Google Scholar
Oitaven, LPC, da Silva Ribeiro, F, de Moura, GJB and de Oliveira, JB (2019) Parasites of Gymnodactylus darwinii Gray, 1845 (Squamata, Phyllodactylidae) from an Atlantic rainforest fragment. Acta tropica 192(1), 123128.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oitaven, LPC, Barbosa de Moura, GJ, Ribeiro, FDS, Lisboa, EBF and Oliveira, JB (2021) Nematodes of Amphisbaena vermicularis Wagler, 1824 (Squamata, Amphisbaenidae) from Brazilian Atlantic Forest remnants. Journal of Natural History 55(19–20), 12271236.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Okamura, B, Hartigan, A and Naldoni, J (2018) Extensa biodiversidade inexplorada: a dimensão parasitária [Extensive unexplored biodiversity: a parasitic dimension]. Biologia Integrativa e Comparativa 58(3), 11321145. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Oliveira, MC, Teixeira, AAM, Teles, DA, Araújo Filho, JAde, Brito, SV and Almeida, WdeO (2015) Bothrops erythromelas. Endoparasite. Herpetological Review 46(3), 444.Google Scholar
Oliveira, BHS, Teixeira, AAM, Queiroz, RNM, Araujo-Filho, JA, Teles, DA, Brito, SV and Mesquita, DO (2017) Nematodes infecting Anotosaura vanzolinia (Squamata: Gymnophthalmidae) from Caatinga, northeastern Brazil. Acta Herpetologica 12(1), 103108.Google Scholar
Oliveira, MC, Lima, VF, Teles, DA and Almeida, W (2018a) Micrurus ibiboboca. Endoparasites. Herpetological Review 49(3), 551.Google Scholar
Oliveira, MC, Lima, VF, Teles, DA, Araújo Filho, JAde and Almeida, WOde (2018b) Bothrops erythromelas (Caatinga Lancechead). Endoparasites. Herpetological Review 49(3), 542543.Google Scholar
Oliveira, MC, Araújo Filho, JAde and Almeida, W (2019a) Oxyrhopus trigeminus. Endoparasites. Herpetological Review 50(3), 599600.Google Scholar
Oliveira, MC, Lima, VF, Pinto, CLM, Silva, ÉG, Teles, DA, Silva, CF and Almeida, WO (2019b) New record of Physaloptera sp. (Nematoda: Physalopteridae) parasitizing Philodryas nattereri (Ophidia: Dipsadidae) in Brazil. Herpetology Notes 12, 10311034.Google Scholar
Oliveira, CNde, Campos, IHMP, de Oliveira, JB and de Moura, GJB (2019c) Acari of lizards from Atlantic Forest in northeastern Brazil. Neotropical Biology and Conservation 14, 109116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oliveira, MC, Duarte, RG, Araújo Filho, JAde and Almeida, WdO (2020) Tropidurus jaguaribanus. Endoparasites. Herpetological Review 51(1), 607.Google Scholar
Otávio, LVP, Silva, JSda, Santos, JHSdos, Simões, EdeP, Silva, GD, Campelo, PNG, Melo, FTdeV and Freire, SM (2018) Parasitos gastrointestinais de Iguana iguana Linnaeus, 1758 (Squamata: Iguanidae) da zona urbana de Teresina, Piauí, Brasil [Gastrointestinal parasites of Iguana iguana Linnaeus, 1758 (Squamata: Iguanidae) from the urban area of Teresina, Piauí, Brazil.] Biota Amazônia (Biote Amazonie, Biota Amazonia, Amazonian Biota) 8(1), 1923. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Paredes-León, R, Garcia-Prieto, L, Guzman-Cornejo, C, Leon-Regagnon, V and Perez, TM (2008) Metazoan parasites of Mexican amphibians and reptiles. Zootaxa 1904(1), 1166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pereira, C (1935) Os Oxyurata parasitos de Lacertilia do nordeste Brasileiro [The Oxyurata parasites of Lacertilia from northeastern Brazil]. Archivos do Instituto Biologico 6(1), 527. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Pereira, FB, Campião, KM, Luque, JL and Tavares, LER (2017) Parapharyngodon hugoi n. sp., a new nematode (Oxyuroidea: Pharyngodonidae) of the tree frog Trachycephalus typhonius (Linnaeus) from the Brazilian Pantanal, including a key to the congeners from amphibians of the American continent. Systematic Parasitology 94(5), 599607.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pereira, AMA, Brito, SV, De Araújo, JA, Teixeira, AAM, Teles, DA, Santana, DO, Lima, VF and Almeida, WD (2018) Diet and helminth parasites of freshwater turtles Mesoclemmys tuberculata, Phrynops geoffroanus (Pleurodira: Chelidae) and Kinosternon scorpioides (Criptodyra: Kinosternidae) in a semiarid region, Northeast of Brazil. Acta Herpetologica 13(1), 2132.Google Scholar
Pereira, RM, Silva, RA, Sampaio, RA, Silva, JF, Oliveira, RL, Pires, CF, Frade, ADA and Araújo, JLD (2021) Clinical and post mortem examination of white worm lizards (Amphisbaena alba) in the State of Paraíba, Northeastern Brazil: morphological, pathological and radiographic findings of a secretive species. Pesquisa Veterinária Brasileira 41(1), e06832.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Quirino, TF, Alcantara, EPde, Silva, CFda, Ávila, RW, Morais, DH and Silva, LAFda (2016) Tropidurus hispidus (Peter's lava lizard). Ectoparasite. Herpetological Review 47(1), 305306.Google Scholar
Quirino, TF, Ferreira, AJMG, Silva, MC, Silva, RJ, Morais, DH and Ávila, RW (2018) New records of helminths in reptiles from five states of Brazil. Brazilian Journal of Biology 78(4), 750754.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ramalho, ACO, da Silva, RJ, Schwartz, HO and Péres, AK Jr (2009) Helminths from an introduced species (Tupinambis merianae), and two endemic species (Trachylepis atlantica and Amphisbaena ridleyi) from Fernando de Noronha Archipelago, Brazil. Journal of Parasitology 95(4), 10261028.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rêgo, AA (1983) Pentastomídeos de répteis do Brasil: revisão dos Cephalobaenidae [Pentastomids from Brazilian reptiles: review of the Cephalobaenidae]. Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz 78(4), 399411. [In Portuguese.]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ribeiro, SC, Ferreira, FS, Brito, SV, Teles, DA, Ávila, RW, Almeida, WO, Anjos, LA and Guarnieri, M (2012) Pulmonary infection in two sympatric lizards, Mabuya arajara (Scincidae) and Anolis brasiliensis (Polychrotidae) from a cloud forest in Chapada do Araripe, Ceará, Northeastern Brazil. Brazilian Journal of Biology 72(4), 929933.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ribeiro, LB, Ferreira, ACS, Silva, DCN, Vieira, FM and Moura, GJB (2018) Helminth parasites of the lizard Nothobachia ablephara (Gymnophthalmidae) in Caatinga areas from the Sertão of Brazil. Journal of Parasitology 104(2), 177182.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rocha, CFD and Vrcibradic, D (2003) Nematode assemblages of some insular and continental lizard hosts of the genus Mabuya Fitzinger (Reptilia, Scincidae) along the eastern Brazilian coast. Revista Brasileira de Zoologia 20(4), 755759.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rocha, CFD, Cunha-Barros, M, Menezes, VA, Fontes, AF, Vrcibradic, D and Van Sluys, M (2008) Patterns of infestation by the trombiculid mite Eutrombicula alfreddugesi in four sympatric lizard species (genus Tropidurus) in northeastern Brazil. Parasite 15(2), 131136.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rocha, CFD, Cunha-Barros, M, Menezes, VA, Vrcibradic, D, Kiefer, MC, Fontes, AF, Van Sluys, M, Galdino, CAB and Maia-Carneiro, T (2020) High prevalence and intensity of infestation of Eutrombicula alfreddugesi (Acarina: Trombiculidae) on Tropidurus torquatus (Squamata, Tropiduridae): effects of body size and on body condition across ten populations along the Brazilian coast. Biologia 75(12), 22312237.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rodrigues, MT (2003) Herpetofauna da Caatinga [Herpetofauna of the Caatinga]. Ecologia e Conservação da Caatinga 1(1), 181236. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Santana, DO, Caldas, FLS, de Queiroga Cavalcanti, LB, Gomes, FFA, da Silva, BD, dos Santos, RA and Faria, RG (2017) Occurrence of Amblyomma sp. (Acari: Ixodidae) in Tropidurus hispidus (Spix, 1825) (Squamata: Tropiduridae) in Parque Nacional Serra de Itabaiana, Sergipe, Brazil. Pesquisa e Ensino em Ciências Exatas e da Natureza 1(2), 99103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Santana, DO, Iwama, RE, Teixeira, AA, Moura, GJ, Faria, RG and Mesquita, DO (2019) Spatio-temporal variation and the use of host body surface by ectoparasites of the chelonians Phrynops geoffroanus and Mesoclemmys tuberculata in areas of the Caatinga and Atlantic Forest in northeast Brazil. Parasitology Research 118(3), 913926.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Santos, EM, Botelho, MCN and De Oliveira, JB (2002) Ectoparasitos de anfíbios anuros (Anura, Bufonidae) capturados na Estação Ecológica do Tapacurá, São Lourenço da Mata, Pernambuco, Brasil [Ectoparasites of anuran amphibians (Anura, Bufonidae) captured at the Tapacurá Ecological Station, São Lourenço da Mata, Pernambuco, Brazil]. Entomología y Vectores 9(1), 105113. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
SiBBr (n.d.) Sistema de Informação sobre a Biodiversidade Brasileira [Information System on Brazilian Biodiversity]. Available at https://www.sibbr.gov.br/?lang=pt_BR (accessed 21 April 2022). [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Silva, R and Kohlsdorf, T (2003) Tropidurus hispidus Spix 1825 (Sauria, Tropiduridae): a new host for Oswaldofilaria petersi Bain & Sulahian 1974 (Nematoda, Onchocercidae). Arquivo Brasileiro de Medicina Veterinária e Zootecnia 55(3), 377379.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Silva, VPda, Pereira, ER, Azevedo, PVD, de Sousa, FDA and Sousa, IFD (2011) Análise da pluviometria e dias chuvosos na região Nordeste do Brasil [Analysis of rainfall and rainy days in the Northeast region of Brazil]. Revista Brasileira de Engenharia Agrícola e Ambiental 15(2), 131138. [In Portuguese.]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Silva, EGda, Pinto, CLdeM, Oliveira, MC, Teles, DA, Araújo Filho, JAde, Pereira, AMA and Almeida, WO (2017) Amphisbaena vermicularis (Wagler's worms lizard). Parasitism. Herpetological Review 48(3), 631.Google Scholar
Silva, EG, Teixeira, AAM, Teles, DA, Araújo Filho, JAde, Mesquita, DO and Almeida, WO (2018) First record of Aplectana sp. (Nematoda: Cosmocercidae) infecting Gymnodactylus darwinii (Gekkota: Phyllodactylidae) from an Atlantic Forest fragmente in northeastern Brazil. Herpetology Notes 11, 10751077.Google Scholar
Silva, EG, Santos, MEP, Brito, SV, Almeida, WO and Ribeiro, SC (2019a) Raillietiella mottae (Pentastomida: Raillietiellidae) infecting Ameiva ameiva (Squamata: Teiidae) in Araripe Plateau, Northeast Brazil. Brazilian Journal of Biology 79(1), 100103.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Silva, LAda, Manoel, PS, Uieda, VS, Avila, RW and Silva, RJD (2019b) Spatio-temporal variation in diet and its association with parasitic helminths in Ameivula pyrrhogularis (Squamata: Teiidae) from northeast Brazil. Herpetological Conservation and Biology 14(2), 325336.Google Scholar
Silva, LAF da, Manoel, PS, Uieda, VS, Ávila, RW and Silva RJda, (2019) Spatio-temporal variation in diet and its association with parasitic helminths in Ameivula pyrrhogularis (Squamata: Teiidae) from Northeast Brazil. Herpetological Conservation and Biology 14(2), 325336.Google Scholar
Silva, TLda, Xavier, MA, dos Santos Carvalho, GD, dos Anjos, LA, Machado, IB and dos Reis Dias, EJ (2021) Parasites of the lizard Strobilurus torquatus Wiegmann, 1834 in Northeastern Brazil (Squamata: Tropiduridae). Herpetology Notes 14, 769771.Google Scholar
Silva Neta, AFda and Ávila, RW (2018) Helminths of the lizard Colobosauroides cearensis (Squamata, Gymnophthalmidae) in an area of Caatinga, Northeastern Brazil. Acta Herpetologica 13(1), 95100.Google Scholar
Sousa, JGG, Ribeiro, SC, Roberto, IJ, Teles, D and Almeida, W (2010) Ocorrência de pentastomídeos (Metameria: Ecdysozoa) no lagarto Phyllopezus pollicaris (Spix, 1825) [Occurrence of pentastomids (Metameria: Ecdysozoa) in the lizard Phyllopezus pollicaris (Spix, 1825)]. Cadernos de Cultura e Ciência 2(2), 6471. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Sousa, JGG, Brito, SV, Ávila, RW, Teles, DA, Araujo-Filho, JA, Teixeira, AAM, Anjos, LA and Almeida, WO (2014) Helminths and Pentastomida of two synanthropic gecko lizards, Hemidactylus mabouia and Phyllopezus pollicaris, in an urban area in Northeastern Brazil. Brazilian Journal of Biology 74(4), 943948.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sousa, GPde, Oliveira, CNde, Ferreira, RNC, Roberto, IJ and Ribeiro, SC (2021) Lygodactylus klugei (Kluge's dwarf gecko). Ectoparasites. Herpetological Review 52(1), 142.Google Scholar
Teixeira, AAM, Brito, SV, Teles, DA, Ribeiro, SC, Araujo-Filho, JA, Lima, VF, Pereira, AMA and Almeida, WO (2016) Helminths of the lizard Salvator merianae (Squamata, Teiidae) in the Caatinga, northeastern Brazil. Brazilian Journal of Biology 77(2), 312317.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Teixeira, AAM, Silva, RJ, Brito, SV, Teles, DA, Araujo-Filho, JA, Franzini, LD, Santana, DO, Almeida, WO and Mesquita, DO (2018a) Helminths infecting Dryadosaura nordestina (Squamata: Gymnophthalmidae) from Atlantic Forest, northeastern Brazil. Helminthologia 55(4), 286291.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Teixeira, AAM, Franzini, LD, Brito, SV, Almeida, WO and Mesquita, DO (2018b) Very low prevalence of infection by Physaloptera lutzi (Nematoda: Physalopteridae) parasitizing Kentropyx calcarata (Squamata: Teiidae), from fragments of Atlantic Forest in Northeast Brazil with a summary of nematodes infecting congeneric species. Herpetology Notes 11, 799804.Google Scholar
Teixeira, AAM, Riul, P, Brito, SV, Araujo-Filho, JA, Teles, DA, de Oliveira Almeida, W and Mesquita, DO (2020) Ecological release in lizard endoparasites from the Atlantic Forest, northeast of the Neotropical Region. Parasitology 147(4), 491500.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Teixeira, AAM, Sampaio, NKS, Araujo-Filho, JA, Teles, DA, Almeida, WO, Mesquita, DO and Brito, SV (2021) Parasitic infection patterns in Coleodactylus meridionalis (Squamata: Sphaerodactylidae) from Atlantic Forest fragments, northeast of the Neotropical Region. Helminthologia 58(4), 356363.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Teles, DA, Brito, SV, Teixeira, AAM, Ribeiro, SC, Araujo-Filho, JA, Lima, VF, Pereira, AMA and Almeida, WO (2016) Nematodes associated with Iguana iguana (Linnaeus, 1758) (Squamata, Iguanidae) in semi-arid areas of northeastern Brazil. Brazilian Journal of Biology 77(3), 514518.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Travassos, L (1931) Pesquizas helminthologicas realizadas em Hamburgo IX. Ensaio monográfico da família Cosmocercidade Trav., 1925 (Nematoda) [Helminthological research carried out in Hamburg IX. Monographic essay of the Cosmocercidade Trav. family, 1925 (Nematoda)]. Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz 25(3), 237298. [In Portuguese.]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Uetz, P and Hosek, J (2022) The Reptile Database. Available at http://www.reptile-database.org/ (accessed 12 April 2022).Google Scholar
Viana, DC, Rodrigues, JFM, Madelaire, CB, Clara, A, Santos, G and Sousa, AL (2016) Nematoda of Kinosternon scorpioides (Testudines: Kinosternidae) from Northeastern Brazil. Journal of Parasitology 102(1), 165166.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vicente, JJ (1978) Helmintos de Tropidurus (Lacertilia, Iguanidae) da coleção helmintológica do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz [Tropidurus helminths (Lacertilia, Iguanidae) from the helminthological collection of Instituto Oswaldo Cruz]. PhD Thesis, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro. [In Portuguese.]Google Scholar
Vicente, JJ, Rodrigues, HDO, Gomes, DC and Pinto, RM (1993) Nematóides do Brasil. Parte III: nematóides de répteis [Brazilian nematodes. Part III: reptile nematodes]. Revista Brasileira de Zoologia 10(1), 19168. [In Portuguese.]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vrcibradic, D, Rocha, CFR and Van Sluys, M (2001) Mabuya macrorhyncha (NCN) Endoparasites. Herpetological Review 32(4), 256–257.Google Scholar
Watson, MJ (2013) What drives population-level effects of parasites? Meta-analysis meets life history. International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife 2(1), 190196.Google ScholarPubMed
Werneck, MR, Lima, EHSM, Pires, T and Silva, RJ (2015) Helminth parasites of the juvenile hawksbill turtle Eretmochelys imbricata (Testudines: Cheloniidae) in Brazil. Journal of Parasitology 101(4), 500503.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Xavier, MA, Anjos, LA, Gazêta, GS, Machado, IB, Storti-Melo, LM and Dias, EJ (2019) Influence of geographic distribution on parasite loads in teiid lizards (Squamata: Ameivula) from northeastern Brazil. Herpetologica 75(4), 315322.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Northeast Brazil and its nine states: MA, Maranhão; PI, Piauí; CE, Ceará; RN, Rio Grande do Norte; PB, Paraíba; PE, Pernambuco; AL, Alagoas; SE, Sergipe; and BA, Bahia.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Number of reptiles’ species with recorded parasite–host association in each state of Northeast Brazil

Figure 2

Fig. 3. Percentage of the main parasitic groups found in each reptile group investigated.