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Larval productivity of Fasciola gigantica in two lymnaeid snails

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2024

Y. Dar
Affiliation:
Department of Zoology, Faculty of Science, University of Tanta, Tanta, Egypt UPRES EA no. 3174, Faculties of Medicine and Pharmacy, 87025, Limoges, France
P. Vignoles
Affiliation:
UPRES EA no. 3174, Faculties of Medicine and Pharmacy, 87025, Limoges, France
D. Rondelaud*
Affiliation:
UPRES EA no. 3174, Faculties of Medicine and Pharmacy, 87025, Limoges, France
G. Dreyfuss
Affiliation:
UPRES EA no. 3174, Faculties of Medicine and Pharmacy, 87025, Limoges, France
*
*Fax: 33-555-435893, Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

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Two groups of Galba truncatula and two groups of Lymnaea natalensis were experimentally infected with Fasciola gigantica to determine if snail species had an influence on the redial burden and cercarial shedding of this trematode when snails of both species were infected with the same isolate of miracidia. In the two groups used for the study of redial burden, the total number of free rediae was significantly higher at day 49 post-exposure in L. natalensis than in G. truncatula. In the groups used for cercarial shedding, the life-span of cercaria-shedding snails and those of infected snails which died without cercarial emission, and the duration of the prepatent period were significantly longer in L. natalensis than those noted in G. truncatula. However, the mean numbers of shed cercariae did not significantly differ and showed no differences in their daily distribution throughout the shedding period. These results demonstrate that G. truncatula might be the principal intermediate host of F. gigantica in Egypt, at least in the areas where this lymnaeid species lives.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2004

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