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A Note on a Species of Bertiella from the Dog Faced Baboon (Papio doguera) in Kenya

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 November 2009

M. C. Round
Affiliation:
Veterinary Research Laboratory, Kabete, Kenya

Extract

Buckley and Fairley (1950) working in England found segments of a species of Bertiella passed by an eight year old girl who had lived in Kenya for 14 months during 1946–47. Since only the terminal segments were available for study, a specific identification could not be made, though the authors thought that it was probably Bertiella studeri (Blanchard, 1891). Nelson (1963) has found that baboons in Kenya are commonly infected with species of Bertiella.

Type
Research Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1964

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References

Adams, A. R. D. and Webb, L., 1933.— “Two further cases of human infestation with Bertiella studeri (Blanchard, 1891) Stiles and Hassall, 1902, with some observations on the probable synonymy of the specimens previously recorded from man.” Ann. trop. Med. Parasit., 27, 471475.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buckley, J. J. C. and Fairley, N. H., 1950.— “Demonstration of a cestode, Bertiella, a rare parasite in man and recorded for the first time as a human infection in Africa.” Trans. R.Soc. trop. Med. Hyg., 44, 2.Google Scholar
Chandler, A. C., 1925.— “New records of Bertiella satyri (Cestoda) in man and apes.” Parasitology, 17, 421425.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nelson, G. S., 1963.—Personal communication.Google Scholar
Stunkard, H. W., 1940.— “The morphology and life history of the Cestode, Bertiella studeri.” Amer. J. trop. Med., 20, 305333.CrossRefGoogle Scholar