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1.
2.
Cercaria sevillana n. sp. (Digenea: Microphallidae) was discovered infecting the gonads and digestive gland of the prosobranch Nassarius reticulatus (L.) (Nassariidae) collected from the Ria de Aveiro, Portugal. Cercariae were obtained by natural emission and were studied under a differential interference contrast microscope and scanning electron microscope (SEM). C. sevillana n. sp. is identical to the cercaria found by Dolgikh (1965) in the same mollusc host from the Black Sea, but erroneously named C. misenensis Palombi, 1940, which is a parasite of Cerithium rupestre Risso, 1826 (Cerithiidae). Cercaria sevillana n. sp. can be distinguished from C. misenensis by its tail being shorter than the cercarial body, as well as by differences in the pattern of penetration glands the size and shape of the stylet and excretory vesicle, and its behavioural pattern. An unusual structure of the tail of this new cercaria was observed by SEM; it is characterised by the presence of annular folded membranes arranged as overlapping flounces around its central axis. This resembles the traditional skirts of the women of Seville. Such a morphological feature of the tail has not been previously observed, but may be a feature of many microphallid cercariae.  相似文献   

3.
The adult monorchiid, Postmonorcheides maclovini Szidat, 1950, digenean parasite of the Patagonian blennie Eleginops maclovinus (Cuvier) (Eleginopidae) from Puerto Deseado (47° 45′ S, 65° 55′ W), Argentina, was characterized and its life cycle elucidated. P. maclovinus is the only species of the genus Postmonorcheides, proposed by Szidat (1950) from Tierra del Fuego province (~ 54° S), Argentina. This digenean uses the Patagonian blennie as definitive host, and the intertidal bivalve Lasaea adansoni (Gmelin) (Lasaeidae) as both first and second intermediate hosts (metacercariae encyst inside sporocysts), being the first record of this clam as intermediate host of trematode parasites. The cercaria may, in addition to encysting in the sporocyst, emerge and presumably infect other intermediate hosts. This is the second report of a monorchiid species with metacercariae encysting inside the sporocyst. Adults were found parasitizing the fish stomach, pyloric caeca and intestine with a prevalence of 100%; sporocysts with cercariae and/or metacercariae were found parasitizing the gonad of the bivalve with a prevalence of 2.78%. The cercariae possess a well-developed tail and eye-spots are absent. The ITS1 sequence from the adult digeneans found in the Patagonian blennie, identified as P. maclovini, was found to be identical to the ITS1 sequences obtained both from sporocysts containing cercariae and encysted metacercariae found in L. adansoni.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract

The cercariae and sporocysts (or rediae) of four trematode species are described from the intertidal snail Zeacumantus subcarinatus: a distome xiphidiocercaria assigned to the genus Renicola (family Renicolidae); a monostome xiphidiocercaria belonging either to the genus Microphallus or Megalophallus (family Microphallidae); a magnacercous cercaria of the genus Galactosomum (family Hetero‐phyidae); and a cercaria of the genus Philophthalmus (family Philophthalmidae). The morphological features of these cercariae are compared to previously described cercariae of the same genera. In addition, since the philophthalmid cercaria encysts readily on artificial substrates in the laboratory, the metacercaria of this species is also described. These cercariae are part of a diverse community of at least six digenean species parasitising the snail Z. subcarinatus that, together, have a major impact on the ecology and evolution of this snail.  相似文献   

5.
A new species of a pharyngeal longifurcate distome furcocercous cercaria characterized, chiefly, by two pairs of penetration glands located pre- and post-acetabulum, well-developed oesophagus and intestinal caeca, 20 flame cells, and by the absence of a transverse excretory commissures, is described from an ancylid mollusc, Gundlachia sp., abundant in Laguna de Los Patos, near Universidad de Oriente, Cumaná, Venezuela. A review of larval trematodes parasitic in ancylid molluscs, with information on their life histories, is given.  相似文献   

6.
Magnacercous cercariae, all morphologically identical but with different coloured tails, were found naturally infecting the intertidal prosobranch gastropod Clypeomorus batillariaeformis Habe & Kosuge (Cerithiidae) at Heron and Masthead Islands. Several species of coral-dwelling fishes were exposed to magnacercous cercariae. Active ingestion by the fish, followed by the complete development of the metacercaria in the optic lobes, occurred in Pomacentrus molluccensis Bleeker, but not in Dascyllus aruanus (L.), where development stopped short after encystment. All cercariae turned out to belong to the same species, Galactosomum bearupi Pearson, 1973. Natural infections of G. bearupi metacercariae were found in eight species of fish at Heron Island: Pomacentrus molluccensis, P. wardi Whitley, P. bankanensis Bleeker, P. flavicauda Whitley, Stegastes cf. fasciolatus (Ogilby), Sillago maculata Quoy & Gaimard, S. cf. ciliata Cuvier and Crenimugil crenilabris (Forsskål). This represents the fourth account of the cercaria of a species of Galactosomum.  相似文献   

7.
A new opecoelid cercaria, Cercaria capricornia XII, is reported from Nassarius olivaceus in Capricornia, Central Queensland, Australia. Combined molecular and morphological data indicate that this cercaria is a member of the subfamily Opecoelinae. Cercaria capricornia XII is the first known opecoeline cercaria reported from a nassariid gastropod. Cercaria capricornia XII can be distinguished from other opecoelid cercariae by the combination of the presence of a 2-pointed stylet, body length and width, and the size of the tail. The emergence pattern for C. capricornia XII in captivity was erratic; rapid emergences of thousands of cercariae were interspersed by periods that sometimes exceeded a month in which no emergence occurred. There was no detectable pattern to or stimulus of the emergence. The molluscan host range of opecoelids is analysed in detail. Gastropods from the Buccinoidea, Cerithioidea and Rissooidea are hosts to both opecoeline and plagioporine cercariae, but the dominant subfamily infecting the Cerithioidea and Rissooidea is the Plagioporinae. The dominant marine host gastropod superfamily for opecoeline cercariae is the Buccinoidea; the family Nassariidae is contained in the Buccinoidea. The range of gastropod superfamilies known as hosts of plagioporines is much broader than that for opecoelines, which may be explained by the relative size of the two opecoelid families and perhaps by indications that the Plagioporinae is polyphyletic.  相似文献   

8.
A new cercaria is recorded from the prosobranch snail Cantharus dorbignyi from the sublittoral region off the coast of Corsica. The redia, cercaria and metacercaria (the latter experimentally developed in the labrid fishes Symphodus ocellatus and S. rostratus) are described, along with the behaviour of naturally emitted cercariae. In view of the morphology of the larval stages, the parasite is thought likely to be an acanthocolpid. The morphology of the cercaria and metacercaria are compared with both known and suspected acanthocolpid cercariae and with adult acanthocolpids known to occur in the Mediterranean. Morphological and circumstantial evidence suggests that this cercaria may be a species of the genus Tormopsolus.  相似文献   

9.
Allodidymozoon gasterale n. sp. and A. operculare Madhavi, 1982 (Digenea: Didymozoidae) were found encysted in pairs in the stomach wall and head muscles, respectively, of the yellow-finned barracuda Sphyraena obtusata in Kuwait Bay, northern Arabian Gulf. The new species can be distinguished from congeneric species by the site of infection, the arrangement of the two individuals in the cyst, the numbers of ovarian and vitelline terminal branches, the size and shape of testes, and the presence of a seminal receptacle. The two didymozoids were examined under the scanning electron microscope.  相似文献   

10.
Larval stages of an echinostome were found in Planorbis planorbis in a brackish water lake on the Black Sea coast of Bulgaria. The cercaria is a large-tailed form with 19 collar spines. The life-cycle was completed in the laboratory using aquarium-reared fishes (Lebistes reticulatus, Puntius tetrazona tetrazona, P. pentazona pentazona, P. nigrofasciatus, Carassius auratus auratus and Xiphophorus helleri) as second intermediate hosts and canaries as definitive hosts. The redia, cercaria, metacercaria and experimentally reared adults are described. The species is determined as Petasiger grandivesicularis Ishii, 1935, and its cercaria is compared in detail with those of related forms. A key to the known large-tailed echinostome cercariae from the Palaearctic Region is presented.  相似文献   

11.
The mechanism of tail loss from cercariae of Schistosoma mansoni was investigated under experimental conditions. Tail loss from 90% or more of cercariae occurred in less than 10 min when packed organisms were incubated at 30 C in a minimal volume of water. Proteolytic secretions from the acetabular glands did not play a significant part in this process since the addition of known protease inhibitors nor the addition of secretions collected from other cercariae influenced the rate of the process. Tail loss was inhibited when the packed cercariae were incubated in saline at concentrations of 0.05 M or above though glandular secretion occurred at an equal rate in both water and saline. Tail loss was also inhibited by the chelating agents ethylenediaminotetraacetic acid (EDTA) and ethyleneglycoltetraacetic acid (EGTA). A marked feature of cercariae packed in water was their clumping and adhesion to the walls of the containing vessel by secretions from the postacetabular glands. Such clumping did not occur in saline or chelant solutions. It is suggested that the most probable mechanism for tail loss is a simple mechanical trauma effected by the movement of the tail acting against the resistance of the secretion-fixed body.During incubation under conditions which remove the “coat” from the body of the cercaria, the “coat” of the tail remains intact.  相似文献   

12.
The life-history of Haplorchoides mehrai Pande & Shukla, 1976 is elucidated. The cercariae occurred in the thiarid snail Melanoides tuberculatus (Muller) collected from Chilka Lake, Orissa State. Metacercariae were found beneath the scales of Puntius sophore (Hamilton). Several species of catfishes in the lake served as definitive hosts. All stages in the life-cycle were successfully established under experimental conditions in the laboratory. The cercariae are of opisthorchioid type with a large globular and highly granular excretory bladder and seven pairs of pre-vesicular penetration glands. The adult flukes are redescribed to include details of the ventro-genital complex. Only three Indian species of the genus, i.e. H. attenuatus (Srivastava, 1935), H. pearsoni Pande & Shukla, 1976 and H. mehrai Pande & Shukla, 1976, are considered valid, and the remaining Indian species of the genus are considered as species inquirendae. The generic diagnosis of Haplorchoides is amended and the genus is included in the subfamily Haplorchiinae and the family Heterophyidae.  相似文献   

13.
A new species of Catatropis from a freshwater pulmonate snail of the family Chilinidae, which is endemic to South America, is described. Naturally infected Chilina dombeiana were collected from several localities in Andean Patagonia. The characteristics of the larval stages are presented. Experimentally reared adults, located in the distal portion of the intestinal caeca, were recovered from chickens and ducks. Adults of Catatropis chilinae n. sp. can be distinguished from all other species in having 9-11 (10) ventral glands, a cirrus-sac extending between the first third and the middle of the body, a metraterm slightly shorter or equal to the cirrus-sac, vitelline follicles reaching forward to the middle of the body, lobed testes, and a genital pore closely posterior to the caecal bifurcation. Eggs bear polar filaments only at the anopercular end. Rediae have only one or two cercariae. Shed cercariae are trioculate with a long tail and encyst in the environment, and metacercariae become infective 72 hours after encystment. This species is widely distributed between 40°10 S and 43°09 S and it is the first Catatropis species recorded for the Chilinidae and for Argentina.  相似文献   

14.
A dense population of Melanoides tuberculata was found at a brackish (5.93–6.98%) desert spring in the United Arab Emirates. A total of 232–300 snails were measured and examined for larval trematodes during the period January 1990 to January 1991. The relative abundance of various size classes of the snail has shown that the mass release of young snails occurred twice a year, in April–May and September–October. Seven different forms of cercariae were found: A xiphidiocercaria, a brevifurcate cercaria, two pleurolophocercous cercariae, two gymnocephalous cercariae, and the cercaria of Philophthalmus gralli. The overall infection rate of this snail was 73.6% and ranged from 51.3 during February–March 1990 to 91.7% during January 1991. The xiphidiocercaria and the P. gralli cercaria were the most abundant and were found in 21.1% and 29.7%, respectively, of the examined snails. A relatively high rate (9.5%) of double infection was found. Cases of triple infection were also encountered.  相似文献   

15.
A new species of Catatropis Oghner, 1905 from a freshwater Neotropical prosobranch snail, Heleobia hatcheri (Hydrobiidae), is described. Naturally infected snails were collected from Nahuel Huapí Lake in Andean Patagonia. The characteristics of the larval stages are also presented. Experimental adults were recovered from the distal region of the intestinal caeca of chicks and ducklings and natural adults from a wild duck Anas platyrhynchos. Adults of Catatropis hatcheri n. sp. can be distinguished from all other species of the genus in having 10–12 (11) ventral glands in each lateral row, the cirrus-sac extending back to between the first third and the middle of the body, the metraterm shorter than the cirrus-sac, a previtelline field of 1,258–1,544 (1,396), vitelline follicles reach back to the anterior border of the testes with some follicles extending slightly lateral to them, only external testicular margin lobed and genital pore in median line just posterior to the intestinal bifurcation. In addition, the eggs have one filament on each pole, the rediae contain one or two mature cercariae, and the cercariae are tri-oculate, with a long tail and encyst in the environment.  相似文献   

16.
A new species of Notocotylus was found parasiting a freshwater pulmonate snail, Biomphalaria peregrina. Naturally infected snails were collected from two temporary ponds in the Nahuel Huapí National Park in Patagonia. The characteristics of the larval stages are presented. Experimental adults were recovered from the intestinal caeca of ducks and chicks. Adults of Notocotylus biomphalariae n. sp. exhibit an aspinose tegument, two lateral rows of 11 ventral glands and a median row of four, a uterus with 12–16 coils of which 2–4 are previtelline, a metraterm equivalent in size to 65–68% of the cirrus-sac length, a previtelline field which extends to the middle of the body, a lobed testis and a genital pore closely posterior to the intestinal bifurcation. The rediae have one to three cercariae. The cercariae, when shed, are trioculate and have a long tail; they encyst in the environment and become infective 12 days after encystment.  相似文献   

17.
The echinostome cercaria,Cercaria patellae Lebour, 1911, which develops in the limpetPatella vulgata (Prosobranchia, Diotocardia, Patellidae), was investigated by light and scanning microscopy. The highest prevalence of limpets with rediae/cercariae occurred on bare rocks on the upper part of the shore. The prevalence was higher in larger snails and in those which had an orange foot-sole. The cercariae penetrated into other gastropods,Aplysia punctata (Opisthobranchia, Cephalaspidea, Aplysiidae),Acanthodoris pilosa (Opisthobranchia, Nudibranchiata, Lamellidorididae) andP. vulgata. No differences in size were found between metacercariae which naturally infected onlyP. vulgata and five-day-old metacercariae from experimental infections. Inin vitro experiments excystation of metacercariae from natural infections took place as a passive process after a double treatment with pepsin and trypsin which caused the dissolution of the cyst wall. After metacercariae from natural infections were fed to one-day-old chickens, the young adults developed. Detailed morphometrical data on rediae, cercariae and metacercariae are compared with previously published measurements of living specimens. Chaetotaxy demonstrated a distinct distribution of tegumental papillae of cercariae, resembling that of the Echinostomatidae or Philophthalmidae. Scanning electron microscopy of adults revealed short, blunt spines anteriorly, while flattened serrated spines occurred on the posterior tegument. Morphometry revealed no major differences to previously published data. Considering all ecological data and comparing the morphological data with those of previous publications by different authors, we conclude thatC. patellae Lebour, 1911, the cercaria in the limpet, is a developmental stage of a digenean in the intestine of the oystercatcherHaematopus ostralegus and should be referred toEchinostephilla patellae (Lebour, 1911) n. comb.  相似文献   

18.
The life-cycle of Helicometra gibsoni n. sp., an opecoelid trematode of marine fishes, is elucidated and the life-history stages are described. Natural infections with the cercariae, which are typically opecoelid in many respects but characterised by having very long, extensile tails, were found in the intertidal snail Anachis terpsichore collected from the Lawson's Bay Coast, Bay of Bengal. Metacercariae were found in the thoracic muscles of the shooting shrimp Alphaeus malabaricus as prominent, reddish-brown, oval cysts. Laboratory experiments demonstrated that 14 days are required for the development of cercaria into the infective metacercarial stage in shrimps. Natural infections with the adult fluke were found in Scorpaenopsis cirrhosus. Therapon jarbua served as an experimental host. Fourteen-day-old metacercariae fed to T. jarbua developed into egg-producing adults in 40–43 days. Intra-specific variations noted in the flukes obtained from natural and experimental infections are presented. H. fasciata of Madhavi (1975) is regarded as a synonym of H. gibsoni.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Specimens of a little-known nematode, Spinitectus oviflagellis Fourment, 1884, the type-species of Spinitectus Fourment, 1884, were collected mainly from the pyloric caeca of a marine deep-water fish, the onion-eye grenadier Macrourus berglax Lacépède (a new host record), in the eastern Greenland Sea, North Atlantic Ocean. Studies using light and scanning electron microscopy revealed some taxonomically important, previously unreported features of S. oviflagellis, such as the detailed structure of the cephalic end, the position of the excretory pore and the presence of ventral pre-anal cuticular ridges (area rugosa) in the male, which indicated a certain degree of intraspecific biometrical variability in this species. S. oviflagellis is compared with similar congeneric species parasitising marine fishes.  相似文献   

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