Wohlfahrtiosis in Italy: a case in a puppy and overview of geographical distribution

The report describes a case of urogenital myiasis in a puppy, Canis lupus familiaris (Carnivora: Canidae) caused by Wohlfahrtia magnifica (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) in Calabria, southern Italy. This species is an obligatory agent of myiasis in human and other warm-blooded vertebrates. The puppy was healthy and was not living near farm animals, usual hosts of this flesh fly. An overview of cases of human and animal myiasis caused by W. magnifica in Italy and of data and specimens documented in entomology museum collections is also reported. Canine, urogenital myiasis, Wohlfahrtia magnifica Myiasis is an important parasitic disease caused by larvae of Diptera infesting vertebrates actively feeding on host tissues (Zumpt 1965). The term “wohlfahrtiosis” refers to myiasis caused by Wohlfahrtia magnifica (Schiner, 1862) (Insecta: Diptera: Sarcophagidae). Among the types of myiasis, wohlfahrtiosis is especially important not only because it may affect humans, but also because it usually induces serious damage due to the high number of deposited larvae and to their rapid growth. When attacking livestock, the parasite may cause heavy economic damages through loss of production and death (Hall and Farkas 2000). In Europe wohlfahrtiosis is an infestation reported in humans and domestic animals in several countries, especially in southern and eastern areas. Among domestic animals, those more frequently affected by wohlfahrtiosis are sheep and goats (Hall and Farkas 2000; Sotiraki and Hall 2012; Hall et al. 2016). This report describes a case of urogenital myiasis in a puppy that occurred in 2017 in Calabria, southern Italy, together with an overview of the documented cases of human and animal myiasis caused by W. magnifica reported in Italy, and of the catalogued data and specimens concerning this species in entomology museum collections.

peroxide and the injured parts of the preputial mucosa were sutured. An antibiotic drug containing benzathine benzylpenicillin and dihydrostreptomycin sulphate and an antiinflammatory drug containing dexamethasone sodium phosphate were administered intramuscularly for five days. The puppy recovered completely after four weeks. The collected larvae, killed by quick immersion in hot water (about 90 °C), were fixed and stored in 80% ethanol and transported to the Laboratory of Applied and Forensic Entomology, Department of Biology, Ecology and Earth Science of the University of Calabria, Cosenza, Italy. The larval morphology was examined under a Meiji Techno RZ stereomicroscopy (Meiji Techno America, Santa Clara, California, USA) by comparison with specimens from the collection of the Department of Biology, Ecology and Earth Sciences, and by taxonomical keys (Szpila et al. 2014(Szpila et al. , 2015.

Discussion
The larvae collected in the preputial region of the puppy were identified as belonging to the species Wohlfahrtia magnifica (Plate III, Fig. 2). The female of this fly is known to deposit larvae not only on host damaged skin or body openings (Patton and Evans 1929) but also on soiled hair and even on hosts with no identifiable predisposing condition (Hall et al. 1995).
Infestations by W. magnifica without any apparent lesions were reported in Hungary in two dogs: in the first case the dog was affected by otitis externa, and in the second case the infestation was located in the vulva, apparently without any previous lesion (Farkas et al. 2009).
Wohlfahrtiosis in dogs may be epidemiologically relevant because they can act as reservoirs and carrier of this parasite, spreading it among livestock and farm animals (Farkas et al. 2009). This myiasis may develop not only in dogs living near farm animals, but also in healthy domestic individuals living outdoor, as in the reported case. The puppy was apparently healthy without any detectable pathology or lesion that could attract females for larval deposition. However, the puppy's young age could have been a predisposing factor, leading to the inability to perform self-cleaning in the genital region. The lack of self-cleaning may have released odors attracting the W. magnifica females (Hall and Farkas 2000).
Wohlfahrtia magnifica, a Palearctic species (Pape 1996), is widely distributed in southern Europe, North Africa, Middle East, and northern Asia up to northwestern China (Povolný and Verves 1997). An overview of the distribution of W. magnifica in Italy was based on reported cases of human and animal myiasis, catalogued data, and specimens in entomology museum collections (Plate IV, Fig. 3, Table 1). This dipteran species is mentioned as a component of Italian fauna as early as the 19 th century, in the collection of a distinguished Italian entomologist, Professor Mario Bezzi . The collection, located in the Natural History Museum of Milan (Milan, Italy) is mentioned in a later monography on Sarcophagidae (Venturi 1960). The specimens of W. magnifica in the collection were referred to three administrative regions, Abruzzo, Campania, and Lazio: the specimens from Abruzzo bore the date 20 July 1896 and the specimens from Campania and Lazio were reported as collected from cases of human myiasis.
The first documented case of myiasis caused by W. magnifica in Italy was reported by the parasitologist Professor Edoardo Perroncito (1847Perroncito ( -1936. In correspondence with two other scientists regarding a case of human gastrointestinal myiasis in Ancona (Marche, Italy) in 1899, the parasitologist identified the agent of myiasis as W. magnifica, using its old taxonomic name Sarcophila magnifica (Perroncito 1900). In the early 20 th century, three other cases of human myiasis by S. magnifica were reported in Italy. The first two cases were auricular myiasis: the first one occurred in 1907 in a baby living in Turin (Piedmont) (Biasioli 1908), and the second one in 1908 in a child living in Taranto (Apulia) (Biasioli 1910). The third case, a cutaneous myiasis, occurred in 1921 in a young man living near Enna (Sicily) (Stancanelli 1922).
Recent inspection of the entomological collection of the Natural History Museum of Venice (Venice, Italy) revealed a specimen of W. magnifica reportedly collected in Veneto in August 1938, and three specimens of the same species reportedly collected in Friuli-Venezia Giulia in June 1963 (Raffone 2009). No other data were published on this species in Italy until the publication of a research article concerning the distribution of W. magnifica in France, Italy, and Spain (Ruíz Martínez and Leclercq 1994). In this article the authors report findings on myiasis in livestock in Abruzzo and Tuscany in 1991, and captured adult flies of the same species in Campania in the same year. However, the geographical coordinates reported as belonging to Abruzzo were actually corresponding to a locality in Lazio (Ruíz Martínez and Leclercq 1994). Several cases of urogenital myiasis in cows were also reported on two farms in central Italy (Ambrosi and Principato 1994).
Reports of myiasis caused by W. magnifica in Italy in animals resumed more recently and have continued to date (Table 1). These cases have been detected in cattle, dogs, sheep, goats, swine and even alpacas, with only single cases detected in a cat, a wild boar, a horse and a rabbit. The reported Italian regions were Apulia, Calabria, Lazio, Molise, Sardinia, Sicily, and Umbria. With regard to humans, two cases were reported in Italy, in August and in September 1997: these are the first reported in Italy after 1921 (Stancanelli 1922). The first case occurred in Sardinia in a farm worker affected by chronic otitis of the middle ear, where the larvae were found (Panu et al. 2000). The second case occurred in Lazio in a boy affected by seborrheic dermatitis causing scalp lesions, who spent the summer in a place frequented by sheep flocks. Many W. magnifica larvae were removed from the scalp lesions (Iori et al. 1999). Only three other cases of human myiasis caused by this species have been reported to date in Italy (Lombardo et al. 2002;Boscarelli and Levi Sandri 2016;Cozzani et al. 2017). All were cutaneous: the first case was an infestation detected in a foot of a man who was diagnosed with diabetic vascular necrosis (Lombardo et al. 2002); the second case involved a child and the site of infestation was the periungual area of the right big toe (Boscarelli and Levi Sandri 2016). The third case was a furuncular myiasis detected in the left side of abdomen of a young woman (Cozzani et al. 2017) which was interesting because this type of myiasis is unusual for W. magnifica.
The locality where the patients acquired myiasis was not reported but based on the hospital where the condition was treated, the three cases could presumably be allocated to Piedmont, Lazio and Liguria, respectively. All cases of myiasis caused by W. magnifica reported in Italy are summarized in Table 1 according to geographical regions, administrative region, host, number, and type of myiasis.

Conclusion
The reported case of a urogenital myiasis caused by W. magnifica in a puppy suggests that dog owners should pay more attention to the health of their animals, especially when they are young and living outdoors, since this species attacks not only wounded or debilitated individuals living near farm animals but also healthy ones with little or no contact with usual hosts. According to present data on distribution of W. magnifica, this species is well documented in most Italian regions (Fig. 3), but further investigations should be conducted in all Italian territory, including not only cases of myiasis or field sampling of adult flies, but also a careful survey of historical museum collections.
These data would yield a more complete outline of the Italian distribution of this dangerous parasite, highly relevant in terms of both veterinary and human medicine.