The influence of second intermediate host species on the infectivity of metacercarial cysts of Echinoparyphium recurvatum

Author:

McCarthy A.M.

Abstract

The potential influence of second intermediate host species on the infectivity of metacercarial cysts of Echinoparyphium recurvatum to the definitive host Anas platyrhynchos was examined experimentally. Echinoparyphium recurvatum metacercarial cysts were obtained from the following experimentally infected second intermediate hosts 14 days post expsoure to cercariae: Lymnaea peregra; Physa fontinalis; L. stagnalis;Planorbis planorbis; Biomphalaria glabrata; tadpoles of the amphibian Rana temporaria. Metacercarial cysts from each of these hosts were fed, in doses of 50 cysts per individual, to separate groups composed of between four and eight, 3-day-old A. platyrhynchos ducklings. All A. platyrhynchos were necropsied 15 days post-infection and the number, size, and reproductive status of E. recurvatum worms in the intestine was recorded. Analyses of variance on the number (transformed log (x + 1)) and size of worms revealed no significant differences in worms originating from metacercariae formed in the different second intermediate hosts (worm number P > 0.05, and worm size P > 0.05). All worms recovered were found to be gravid. It is therefore concluded that the species of second intermediate host utilized does not influence the infectivity of the metacercarial cyst of E. recurvatum, nor the subsequent establishment and reproductive status of the parasite in A. platyrhynchos.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,General Medicine,Parasitology

Reference9 articles.

1. McCarthy A.M. (1989) The biology and transmission dynamics of Echinoparyphium recurvatum (Digenea: Echinostomatidae). 329 pp. PhD thesis, King's College London, University of London.

2. Experimental observations on the specificity ofEchinoparyphium recurvatum toward second intermediate hosts

3. Parasite utilization of a host community: the distribution and occurrence of metacercarial cysts of Echinoparyphium recurvatum (Digenea: Echinostomatidae) in seven species of mollusc at Harting Pond, Sussex

4. Helminths from Wild Anatids in Great Britain

5. Chaetotaxy and excretory system of the cercaria of Echinoparyphium recurvatum (Linstow, 1873) (Digenea, Echinostomatidae);Grabda-Kazubska;Acta Parasitologica Polonica,1989

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