Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T02:41:10.687Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Experiments on habitat selection of Heterophyes species in different definitive hosts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2009

Horst Taraschewski
Affiliation:
Ruhr-Universität-Bochum, Spezielle Zoologie und Parasitologie, D 4630 Bochum, Federal Republic of Germany

Abstract

Heterophyes heterophyes, H. aequalis and H. dispar showed distinct zonation in the small intestine of different definitive hoste. The flukes were found in their appropriate zone within four to six hours after infection. It appeared that their position shifted posteriorly during their life and that the shift proceeded more rapidly in unsuitable hosts. Hisgological sections revealed that the flukes are not deeply embedded in the host's mucosa.

Type
Research Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1987

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Asanji, M.F. & Williams, M.O. (1974) Studies on the excystment of trematode metacercariae in vivo. Journal of Helminthology. 48, 8591.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Baruš, V., Moraveć, F. & Rysavy, B. (1974). Antagonistic interactions between Echinostoma revolutum and Echinoparyphium recurvatum (Trematoda) in the definitive host. Folia Parasitologica (Prague), 21, 155159.Google ScholarPubMed
Croll, N.A. (1976). The location of parasites within their hosts: The influence of host feeding and diet on the dispersion of adults of Nippostronglyus brasiliensis in the intestine of the rat. International Journal for Parasitology. 6, 441448.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evans, N.A. (1977). The site perferences of two digeneans, Asymphylodora kubanicum and Sphaerostoma bramae, in the intestine of the roach. Journal of Helminthology. 51, 197204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fried, B., Robbings, S.H. & Nelson, P.D. (1978). In vivo and in vitro excustation of Zygocotyle lunata (Trematoda) metacercariae and histochemical observations on the cyst. Journal of Parasitology. 64, 395397.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grétillat, S. (1967). De ľubiquité des Paramphistomatoidea (Trematoda) ďongules. Helminthologia, 8, 161169.Google Scholar
Hamdy, E.J. & Nicola, E. (1980, publ. 1981) On the histopathology of the small intestine in animals experimentally infected with H. hetrophyes. Journal of the Egyptian Medical Association, 63, 179184.Google Scholar
Hermann, S.M. & Bacha, W.J. (1978) Growth, development, and site location of the trematode Himasthla quissetensis in the chick following cloaca drop infections with cercariae. Journal of Parasitoloty, 64, 827830.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holmes, J.C. (1972). Site selection by parasitic helminths: interpecific interactions, site segregation and their importance to the development of helmnith communities. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 51, 33347.Google Scholar
Ito, J. (1964). Metagonimus and other human heterophyid trematodes. Progress of Medical Parasitology in Japan, 1, 315398.Google Scholar
Kliks, M. & Tantachamrum, T. (1974). Heterophyid (Trematoda) parasites of cats in north thailand, with notes on a human case found at necropsy. Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and public Health, 5, 547555.Google ScholarPubMed
Mackenezie, K. & Gibson, D. (1970). Ecological studies of some parasites of plaice, Pleuronectes platessa (L.) and flounder Platichthys flesus (L.). In: Aspects of fish parasitology. Editors Taylor, A. E. R. & Müller, R.. Blackwell Science Publications: Oxford, UK.Google Scholar
Mcvicar, A.H. (1979). The distribution of cestodes within the spiral intestine of Raja naevus Muller & Henle. International Journal for Parasitology, 9, 165176.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mansour, N.S., Youssef, M., Awadalla, H.N., Hammouda, N.H. & Boulos, L.M. (1981). Susceptibility of small laboratory animals to Pygidiopsis genata (Trematoda: Heterophyldae). Journal of the Egyptian Society for Parasitology, 11, 225234.Google Scholar
Mettrick, D.F. & Podesta, E.B. (1982). Effect of gastrointestinal hormones and amines on intestinal motility and the migration of Hymenolepis diminuta in the rat small intestin. International Journal for Parasitology, 12, 151154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pearson, J.C. & Ow-Yang, C.K. (1982). New species of Haplorchis from Southeast Asia, together with the keys to the Haplorchis-group of heterophyid trematodes in the region. Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public Health, 13, 3560.Google Scholar
Pemberton, R.T. (1963). Helminth parasites of three species of Biritsh gull, Larus argentatus Pont., L. fuscus L. and L. ridibundus L. Journal of Helminghology, 37, 5788.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Radlett, A.J. (1979). Excystation of Notocotylus attenuatus (Rudolphi, 1809) Kossack, 1911 (Trematoda: Notocotylidae) and their location in the caecum of the domestic fowl. Parasitology, 79, 411416.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smyth, J.D. (1962). Introduction to Animal Parasitology. London University Press.Google Scholar
Tantachamrum, T. & Kliks, M. (1978). Heterophyid infection in human ileum: reprot of three cases. Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public Health, 9, 228231.Google Scholar
Taraschewski, H. (1985a). Transmission experiments on the host-specificity of Heterophyes species in 16 potential definitive hosts. Zeitschrift für Parasitenkunde, 71, 505518.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Taraschewski, H. (1985b). Investigations on prevalence of Heterophyes species in 12 populations of the first intermediate host in Egypt and Sudan. Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 88, 265271.Google Scholar
Ulmer, M.J. (1970). Site finding behaviour in helminths in intermediate and defenitive hosts. In: Fallis, A. M., (Editor): Ecology and physiology of parasites, University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Witenberg, G. (1929). Studies on the trematode-family Heterophyidae. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology, 23, 131239.CrossRefGoogle Scholar