Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T23:41:15.893Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Studies on the Nematode Parasites of Malaysian Rodents. I. The Rhabdiasidea, Trichuridea and Oxyuridea*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2009

C. K. Ow-Yang
Affiliation:
From the Department of ParasitologyLondon School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine

Extract

Rodents, particularly those belonging to the family Muridae, form the largest group of mammals in Malaysia. They are also a group that has been well studied because of their medical and economic importance. Yet, comparatively little is known, in Malaysia, about the helminths that are associated with them; far less the types of terrain in which these are prevalent. An attempt is now made to survey the nematodes parasitic in these rodents, with a view to assessing the potential risk from those that are harmful to man and domestic animals, and to studying those that are harmless, but nevertheless form an enlightening contribution to the knowledge of Malaysian parasitic fauna.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1971

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

Adams, A. R. D., 1933.—“Report on a collection of nematodes from the Federal Malay States.” Ann. trop. Med. Parasit., 27, 114.Google Scholar
Audy, J. R., Harrison, J. L. and Wyatt-Smith, J., 1950.—“A survey of Jarak Island.” Bull. Raffles Mus., 23, 230261.Google Scholar
Baylis, H. A., 1928.—“On a collection of nematodes from Nigerian mammals (chiefly rodents).” Parasitology, 20, 280304.Google Scholar
Dunn, F. L. and Ramachandran, C. P., 1962.—“Filarial heart-worm of Malayan forest mammals.” Med. J. Malaya, 17, 87.Google Scholar
Hall, M. C., 1916.—“Nematode parasites of mammals of the orders Rodentia, Lagomorpha, and Hyracoidea.” Proc. U.S. natn. Mus., 50, 1258.Google Scholar
Harrison, J. L., 1957.—“Malaysian parasites XXXIII. The hosts.” Stud. Inst. med. Res., 28, 409426.Google Scholar
Sandosham, A. A., 1954.—“Malaysian parasites II. Preliminary note on the incidence of worm infection in common hosts.” Stud. Inst. med. Res., 26, 2328.Google Scholar
Sandosham, A. A., 1957.—“Malaysian parasites XXXII. Infection of animals by major groups of helminths: an interim tabulation.” Stud. Inst. med. Res., 28, 403408.Google Scholar
Sivanandam, S., Sandosham, A. A. and Wong, M. M., 1965 a.—“A filarial worm in the thoracic cavity of a rat (Rattus annandalei).” Med. J. Malaya, 20, 64.Google Scholar
Sivanandam, S., Sandosham, A. A. and Wong, M. M., 1965 b.—“Filarial worms in the heart, lung and liver of forest rats (Rattus sabanus).” Med. J. Malaya, 20, 6465.Google Scholar
Tubangui, M. A., 1931. —“Worm Parasites of the brown rat (Mus norvegicus) in the Philippine Islands, with special reference to those forms that may be transmitted to human beings.” Philipp. J. Sci., 46, 537591.Google Scholar
Yamaguti, S., 1941.—“Studies on the helminth fauna of Japan. Part 35. Mammalian nematodes, II.” Jap. J. Zool., 9, 409439.Google Scholar
Yeh, L. S., 1955.—“A new bursate nematode Hepatojarakus malayae gen. et sp. nov. from the liver of Rattus rattus jarak (Bonhote) on Pulau Jarak, Straits of Malacca.” J. Helminth., 29, 4448.Google Scholar