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New Filariae from Indian Birds

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

Asa C. Chandler
Affiliation:
(From the Hookworm Research Laboratory (supported by Indian Jute Mills Association), Calcutta School of Tropical Medicine.)

Extract

In the body-cavity of a Racket-tailed Drongo (Dissemurus paradiseus) which died at the Calcutta Zoological Gardens, and the blood of which was teeming with two species of microfilariae, were found males of two new species of filariae, together with a single female specimen. In a Hunting Cissa (Cissa chinensis), which died at about the same time, males of one of the species discovered in the Drongo were found again, accompanied by a single female different from that found before. Since this cissa also harboured two species of microfilariae in its blood, the identity of either of the females is doubtful. In another specimen of hunting cissa a single male specimen of an entirely different species, which I have made the type of a new genus, was found. Here again two species of microfilariae were discovered so that it is not possible to say which is the offspring of the adult found. It had been hoped that more infected specimens of these birds might be obtained so that the confusion as regards relationships of the females and offspring to the males might be cleared up, but there appears to be little hope of more being obtained in the near future.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1924

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