Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7fkt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T10:07:31.022Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Nematode Parasites of Vertebrates in the Philadelphia Zoological Garden and Vicinity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

William P. N. Canavan
Affiliation:
From the Zoological Laboratory of the University of Pennsylvania and the Medical Laboratory of the University of Oklahoma.

Extract

Emended descriptions of the female of Ascaridia hermaphrodita (Froelich 1789) and of the male of Wellcomia evoluta (Linstow 1899) are given. The female of A. hermaphrodita is described in full as a description of it does not appear in the literature. Several corrections are made of errors found in descriptions. Especially noticeable is the illustration of the male tail of W. evoluta by Yorke and Maplestone (1926), p. 197, (fig. 131 E) which they wrongly label “Posterior extremity of female (After Hall).”

Further evidence is furnished upon the probable life-cycle of a species of the genus Eustrongylides in showing that pre-adult stages of E. wenrichi Canavan 1929 have been found encysted in a fish, as well as in a frog and amphiuma (“Congo eel”); the adults of the worm were found in a Canadian goose. Thus confirming Jaegerskiöld in his opinion that fish are the intermediate host and fish-eating aquatic birds are the final hosts of the genus.

Superparasitism is shown to be of fairly common occurrence. Numerous records of new hosts are mentioned. Three worms that previously were found and described by the writer as new were found again. In each case they were encountered in new but closely related hosts to those in which they were previously found.

There are five new species and one new genus described and illustrated in this paper (II): Pharyngostrongylus brevis sp. nov. from a Bernard's kangaroo, Phascolostrongylus turleyi gen. et sp. nov. from a common wombat. Oesophagostomum vigintimembrum sp. nov. from an Arabian camel, Ascaris hippopotami sp. nov. from a hippopotamus and Diplotriaena bifidus sp. nov. from both blue-bearded and pileated jays.

Finally, there are 209 determinations of 39 genera and 69 species, including new ones, from 181 hosts involving 94 different host species.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1931

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

Barreto, A. L. De Barros (1919). On the Brazilian species of the sub-family Subulurinae Travassos 1914. Mem. do Inst. Oswaldo Cruz, 11, 6. Rio de Janeiro.Google Scholar
Baylis, H. A. (1921). On the classification of the Ascaridae. II. The Polydelphis group, with some account of other ascarids parasitic in snakes. Parasitology, 12, 411.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baylis, H. A. (1927). Some new parasitic nematodes from Australia. Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist. Ser. 9, 20, 215.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baylis, H. A. (1929). A Manual of Helminthology, Medical and Veterinary. 276 pp. Wm. Wood and Co., New York.Google Scholar
Baylis, H. A. and Daubney, R. (1922). Report on the parasitic Nematodes in the collection of the Zoological Survey of India. Mem. of the Indian Mus. 7, 4, 263. Calcutta.Google Scholar
Boulenger, C. L. (1920). Filariid worms from mammals and birds in the Society's Gardens, 1914–1915. Proc. Zool. Soc. London, p. 491.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boulenger, C. L. (1921). On some filariid parasites of cattle and other ruminants. Parasitology, 12, 341.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boulenger, C. L. (1928). Report on a collection of parasitic nematodes, mainly from Egypt. Part V. Filarioidea. Parasitology 20, 3255.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Canavan, Wm. P. N. (1929). Nematode parasites of vertebrates in the Philadelphia Zoological Garden and vicinity. Parasitology 21, 63102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chandler, As. C. (1930). Specific characters of the genus Trichuris, with a description of a new species Trichuris tenuis from a camel. J. Parasit. 16, 198.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cram, Eloise.(1927). Bird parasites of the nematode sub-orders Strongylata, Ascaridata, and Spirurata. Smithsonian Inst. U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. p. 140.Google Scholar
Fox, Herbert.(1930). Yearly Report of Laboratory and Mus. of Compar. Pathol. of Phila. Zool. Garden. U.S.A.Google Scholar
Goodey, T., and Cameron, T. W. M. (1923). Observations on the morphology and life-history of Ascaris columnaris Leidy, a nematode parasite of the skunk. J. Helminthology, 1, 1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall, M. C. (1916). Nematode parasites of mammals of the orders Rodentia, Lagomorpha, and Hyracoidea. Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus. 50, 258 pp.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leiper, R. T. (1910). The entozoa of the Hippopotamus. Proc. Zool. Soc. London, p. 233.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Linstow, O. von (1899). Nematoden aus der Berliner Zoologischen Sammlung. Mitt. a. d. Zool. Mus. 1, 3. Berlin.Google Scholar
Ortlepp, R. J. (1922). The nematode genus Physaloptera Rud. Proc. Zool. Soc. London, p. 999.Google Scholar
Railliet, A. and Henry, A. (1907). Sur les variations des Strongyles de l'appareil respiratoire des Mammifères. C.R. Soc. Biol. 63, 751.Google Scholar
Railliet, A. and Henry, A. (1913). Sur les Oesophagostomiens des ruminants. Bull. Soc. Path. Exot. 6, 506.Google Scholar
Railliet, A. and Henry, A. (1914). Essai de classification des Heterakidae. Ext. IXe Congrès Internat. Zool. 1913, p. 674. Monaco.Google Scholar
Railliet, A., Henry, A. and Langeron, M. (1912). Le genre Acanthocheilonema Cobbold, et les Filaires péritonéales des carnivores. Bull. Soc. Path. Exot. 5, 392.Google Scholar
Ransom, B. H. (1911). The nematodes parasitic in the alimentary tract of cattle, sheep, and other ruminants. U.S. Dept. Agric. Bureau of Animals Industry, Bull. 127.Google Scholar
Schmerling, A. A. (1925). Zur Kenntnis der Vogelfilarien (Squanmofilaria n.gen. und Diplotriaena artemisiana n.sp.) von Coracias garrula L. Centralbl. f. Bakt. Abt. II, 63, 267.Google Scholar
Schneider, A. (1866). Monographie der Nematoden, xiii, 357 pp. Berlin.Google Scholar
Schwartz, B. (1927). Description of Ancylostoma pluridentatum, a hookworm of carnivores, and a review of the genus Ancylostoma. Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus. 72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seurat, L. G. (1914). Sur les Physaloptères des Rapaces. Bull. Soc. d'Hist. Nat. de l'Afrique du Nord, 5, 244.Google Scholar
Seurat, L. G. (1919). Nématodes de la Panthère. Bull. Soc. d'Hist. Nat. de l'Afrique du Nord 10, 47.Google Scholar
Skrjabin, K. J. (1917). Sur quelques Nématodes des Oiseaux de la Russie. Parasitology, 9, 460.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thornton, H. (1924). A review of the Oesophagostomes in the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine. Ann. of Trop. Med. and Par. 18, 393.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Travassos, L. (1915). Contribuições para o conhecimento da fauna helmintolojica brazileira. V. Sobre as especies brasileiras do genero Capillaria Zeder 1800. Mem. do Inst. Oswaldo Cruz, 7, 146.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vevers, G. M. (1920). Report on entozoa collected from animals which died in the Zoological Gardens of London during eight months of 1919–1920. Proc. Zool. Soc. London, p. 405.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yorke, W. and Maplestone, P. A. (1926). The Nematode Parasites of Vertebrates. 536 pp. London: Churchill.Google Scholar