Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-mkpzs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T08:24:48.735Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The infection of the gulls Larus argentatus Pont., L. fuscus L. and L. marinus L. with Cestoda on the coast of Wales

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

I. C. Williams
Affiliation:
Department of Zoology, University of Hull
M. P. Harris
Affiliation:
Department of Zoology, University College of Swansea

Extract

An account is given of the incidence and intensity of infection of the gulls Larus argentatus Pont., L. fuscus L., and L. marinus L. with Cestoda on the coast of Wales. Eleven species of cestodes were found in the three species of gulls, nine in L. argentatus, eight in L. fuscus and six in L. marinus. Nine new host records and two new British records are listed.

The presence of the cestode parasites did not appear to be harmful to the birds.

Ecological and systematic notes are given on each of the cestode species. The basic cestode fauna of L. argentatus, L. fuscus and L. marinus on the coast of Wales comprised three species, namely Tetrabothrius cylindraceus (Rud.), T. erostris (voennberg) and Anomotaenia micracantha (Krabbe).

The factors influencing the intensity and incidence of infection are considered and it is concluded that infection is determined mainly by the food and feeding habits of the host. It is shown that the number of cestodes per bird may be represented by a negative binomial distribution. There is some evidence to suggest that high intensities of infection were associated with high incidences. Three main stages in the development of the helminth-fauna of gulls are described and are related to the age and activity of the bird.

It is a pleasure to record our personal thanks to those to whom we are indebted, namely the Nature Conservancy and the West Wales Naturalists' Trust for permission to work on Skomer Island, to Mr D. R. Saunders, Warden of Skomer Island, for help in the collection of some of the Great Black-backed Gulls, to Mr P. Hope Jones who collected the gulls from Malltraeth, and to Professor J. G. Baer, Departement de Zoologie, Université de Neuchâtel, Professor W. E. Kershaw, Department of Parasitology and Entomology, University of Liverpool, and Mr Stephen Prudhoe, British Museum (Natural History), for the loan of specimens, and to Mr M. D. B. Burt, Department of Natural History, University of St Andrews, for identifying the specimens of Paricterotaenia paradoxa.

The participation of one of us (M. P. H.) in this work was made possible through the generous assistance of a D.S.I.R. research studentship, which is gratefully acknowledged.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1965

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

Baer, J. G. (1954). Revision taxonomique et étude biologique des cestodes de la famille des Tetrabothriidae parasites d'oiseaux de haute mer et de mammifères marins. Mém. Univ. Neuchâtel, 1, 121 pp.Google Scholar
Baer, J. G. (1956). Parasitic helminths collected in West Greenland. Medd. Grønland. 124, 155.Google Scholar
Baer, J. G. (1962). Cestoda. Zoology of Iceland, 2(12), pp. 163.Google Scholar
Baylis, H. A. (1928). Records of some parasitic worms from British vertebrates. Ann. Mag. nat. Hist. 1, 329–43.Google Scholar
Baylis, H. A. (1939). Further records of parasitic worms from British vertebrates. Ann. Mag. nat. Hist. 4, 473–98.Google Scholar
Bent, A. C. (1929). Life histories of North American shore birds. Order Limicolae (Part 2). Bull. U.S. nat. Mus. 146, pp. 1412.Google Scholar
Bertram, D. S. (1949). Studies on the transmission of cotton rat filariasis. I. The variability of the intensities of infection in the individuals of the vector, Liponyssus bacoti, its causation and its bearing on the problem of quantitative transmission. Ann. trop. Med. Parasit. 43, 313–32.Google Scholar
Deblock, S., Capron, A. & RosÉ, F. (1960). Redescription d'Hymenolepis (nec Aploparaksis) cirrosa (Krabbe, 1869) (Cestoda, Hymenolepididae). Bull. Soc. zool. Fr. 85, 5867.Google Scholar
Dubinina, M. N. (1953). [Cestodes of birds nesting in western Siberia.] Mag. Parasit. Moscow, 15, 117233. (In Russian.)Google Scholar
Elce, J. B. (1962). On a new cestode, Choanotaenia larimarina sp.nov., from the Greater Black-backed Gull, Larus marinus L. J. Helminth. 36, 365–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
FagasiŃski, A. (1962). Helminth parasites of domestic galliform birds in Poland. Acta parasit. pol. 10, 347–68.Google Scholar
Froyd, G. & Clarke, R. T. (1962). The frequency distribution of some helminth parasites. Br. vet. J. 118, 151–58.Google Scholar
Fuhrmann, O. (1908). Nouveaux ténias d'oiseaux. Rev. suisse Zool. 16, 2773.Google Scholar
Fuhrmann, O. (1913). Nordische Vogelcestoden aus dem Museum von Göteborg. Medd. Göteborgs Mus. Zool. 1, 141.Google Scholar
Fuhrmann, O. (1918). Cestodes d'oiseaux de la Nouvelle-Calédonie et des Îles Loyalty. F. Sarasin & J. Roux. Nova Caledonia, A. Zoologie, 2, 399449.Google Scholar
Fuhrmann, O. (1921). Die Cestoden der Deutschen Südpolar Expedition 1901–1903. Deutsche Südpolar Expedition, 1901–1903 (1920), 16, Zoologie, 8, 469524.Google Scholar
Fuhrmann, O. (1932). Les ténias des Oiseaux. Mém. Univ. Neuchâtel, 8, 381 pp.Google Scholar
Harris, M. P. (1965). The food of some Larus gulls. Ibis, 107, 4353.Google Scholar
Hu, S. M. K. (1931). Studies on host-parasite relationships of Dirofilaria immitis Leidy, and its culicine intermediate hosts. Amer. J. Hyg. 14, 614–29.Google Scholar
Hunter, G. C. & Quenouille, M. H. (1952). A statistical examination of the worm egg count sampling technique for sheep. J. Helminth. 26, 157170.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jennings, A. R. & Soulsby, E. J. L. (1957). Diseases of wild birds, fourth report. Bird Study, 4, 216–20.Google Scholar
Joyeux, C. & Baer, J. G. (1954). Cestodes et acanthocéphales récoltés par M. Patrice Paulien aux Iles Kerguelen et Amsterdam, 1951–52. Mém. Inst. sci. Madagascar, Serie A, 9, 2340.Google Scholar
Krabbe, H. (1869). Bidrag til Kundskab om Fuglenes Baendelorme. K. danske vidensk. Selsk. 8, 249363.Google Scholar
Leonov, V. A. (1958). [Helminthfauna of lariform birds from the Black Sea reserve and the adjacent territory of Kherson Province] Uch. zap. Gorkiy Gosud. Pedagog. Inst. 20, 266–96. (In Russian.)Google Scholar
Leonov, V. A. (1960). [Dynamics of the helminthfauna of the Herring Gull nesting in the territory of the Black Sea reserve.] Uch. zap. Gorkiy Gosud. Pedagog. Inst. 27, 3857. (In Russian.)Google Scholar
Li, S. Y. & HsÜ, H. F. (1951). On the frequency distribution of parasitic helminths in their naturally infected hosts. J. Parasit. 37, 3241.Google Scholar
Linton, E. (1927). Notes on cestode parasites of birds. Proc. U.S. nat. Mus. 70, 173.Google Scholar
Mamaev, F. L. (1959). [Helminthfauna of charadriiform birds in eastern Siberia.] Trud. gel'mint. Lab. 9, 160–74. (In Russian.)Google Scholar
Markov, G. S. (1941). [Parasites of birds from Bezymyanna Bay (Novaya Zemlya).] C.R. Acad. Sci. USSR., Gelmintol. 30, 573576. (In Russian.)Google Scholar
Mayhew, R. L. (1925). Studies on the avian species of the cestode family Hymenolepididae. Illinois biol. Monogr. 10, pp. 1125.Google Scholar
Nicoll, W.in McIntosh, W. C. (1927). Additions to the marine fauna of St Andrews since 1874. Ann. Mag. nat. Hist. 19, 4994.Google Scholar
Northan, J. I. & Rocha, U. F. (1958). On the statistical analysis of worm counts in chickens. Expl Parasit. 7, 428–38.Google Scholar
Owen, R. Wynne & Pemberton, R. T. (1962). Helminth infection of the Starling (Sturnus vulgaris L.) in northern England. Proc. zool. Soc. Lond. 139, 557–87.Google Scholar
Pemberton, R. T. (1963). Helminth parasites of three species of British gulls, Larus argentatus Pont., L. fuscus and L. ridibundus L. J. Helminth. 37, 5788.Google Scholar
Ransom, B. H. (1909). The taenioid cestodes of North American birds. Bull. U.S. nat. Mus. 69, pp. 1141.Google Scholar
Ritchie, J. (1915). A contribution to the parasitic fauna of the west coast of Scotland. Glasg. Nat. 7, 3342.Google Scholar
Ryšavý, B. (1961). Tasemice vodního ptactva z Rybniční Oblasti jižních Čech. Čslka. Parasit. 8, 325–63.Google Scholar
Schiller, E. L. (1951). Studies on the helminth fauna of Alaska. VIII. Some cestode parasites of the Pacific Kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla Ridgway) with the description of Haploparaksis rissae n.sp. Proc. Helminth. Soc. Wash. 18, 122–25.Google Scholar
Shigin, A. A. (1961). [Helminth fauna of lariform birds in the Rybinsk reservoir.] Trud. Darwinskii Gosud. zapov. 7, 309–62. (In Russian.)Google Scholar
Solomon, S. G. (1934). Note on the entozoa of a Herring Gull shot at Millport. Glasg. Nat. 12, 20–3.Google Scholar
Southwell, R. (1930). Cestoda, Vol. 2. Fauna of British India, including Ceylon and Burma, 262 pp. London: Taylor and Francis Ltd.Google Scholar
Spasskaya, J. P. (1957 a). [The cestode fauna of birds of Yakutsk II.] Acta vet. hung. 7, 101–27. (In Russian.)Google Scholar
Spasskaya, J. P. (1957 b). [The cestode fauna of birds of Komi A.S.S.R.] Acta vet. hung. 7, 185207. (In Russian.)Google Scholar
Spasski, A. A. & Bobova, L. P. (1962). [Cestodes of the family Hymenolepididae from water birds of Kamchatka.] Trud. gel'mint. Lab. 12, 172200. (In Russian.)Google Scholar
Swenk, M. H. (1916). The Eskimo Curlew and its disappearance. Rep. Smithson. Instn. 1916, pp. 325–40.Google Scholar
Turemuratov, A. T. (1962). [Studies on the helminthfauna of herons and gulls in the Amu Darya delta.] Trud. gel'mint. Lab. 12, 263–77. (In Russian.)Google Scholar
Williams, G. G. (1959). Probable Eskimo Curlew on Galveston Island, Texas. Auk. 76, 539–41.Google Scholar
Williams, I. C. (1962). A list of parasitic worms, including twenty-five new records, from British birds. Ann. Mag. nat. Hist. (13), 4, 467–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Witherby, H. F., Jourdain, F. C. R., Ticehurst, N. F. & Tucker, B. W. (1941). The Handbook of British Birds, 5, 356 pp. London: H. F. and G. Witherby Ltd.Google Scholar
Young, R. T. (1950). Cestodes of California gulls. J. Parasit. 36, 912.Google Scholar
Zenkevich, L. (1963). Biology of the seas of the U.S.S.R. (translation by S. Botcharskaya). 955 pp. London: G. Allen and Unwin.Google Scholar