INVESTIGADORES
BELTRAME Maria Ornela
artículos
Título:
Recovering ancient parasites from Andean herbivores: test of the Mini-FLOTAC technique in archaeological samples
Autor/es:
CAÑAL, VICTORIA; BARBERENA, RAMIRO; URQUIZA, SILVANA; CRINGOLI, GIUSEPPE; BELTRAME, MARÍA ORNELA
Revista:
PARASITOLOGY RESEARCH
Editorial:
SPRINGER
Referencias:
Lugar: Berlin; Año: 2024 vol. 123
ISSN:
0932-0113
Resumen:
The optimization of techniques for recovering parasitic remains is key in paleoparasitology. The Mini-FLOTAC technique(MF) is based on passive flotation and is used for diagnosis of parasites and was never tested on ancient samples. Ourobjective was to assess the effectiveness of MF in paleoparasitology, aiming at improving the techniques for the recovery ofparasitic remains in order to upgrade the interpretative potential of the paleoparasitological evidence. Three techniques weretested: MF, spontaneous sedimentation (SS), and centrifugation-sucrose flotation (CF) testing camelid and goat coprolites.Statistical tests were performed with the R software. Our result displayed that, in the case of SAC samples, MF recoveredless number of parasitic species than SS, but obtained a greater number of positive samples for protozoa. For goat samples,MF recovered a higher number of positive samples and parasitic species than SS, added that it was the technique thatrecovered a greater number of parasite structures. Therefore, results vary according to the zoological origin of the samplesand the parasitic species recorded. We suggest starting using MF on ancient samples as a complementary method to thosetraditionally used in paleoparasitology. It is important to highlight that MF was a simple and faster way. The incorporationof reliable quantitative techniques opens the door to a new way of analyzing archaeological remains, deepening the studyof the parasite-host relationships and its evolution through time with an epidemiological approach. Although further studiesare needed, our results suggest the complementarity of these techniques in future paleoparasitological studies.