Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-29T17:21:29.539Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Some Ascarids in the British Museum (Natural History)1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

Extract

An examination of a considerable number of specimens of larval Ascarids from the peritoneal tissues of marine fishes has led me to the conclusion that the great majority of these young nematodes are referable to a single species, Ascaris capsularia Rud. The older descriptions of this form are inadequate and superficial, and even by the more recent writers it appears to have been assumed that, as a larval form, it was impossible, or not worth while, to define it more precisely. I believe, however, that by paying attention to the internal structure it is possible, even at this early stage, to discover characters of specific importance. The imperfect recognition of these characters has led, it appears, to considerable confusion, and to the inclusion in the species of some forms which should be regarded as specifically distinct. A full synonymy and bibliography has been given by Stossich (1896, pp. 55–57) and it is unnecessary here to review the literature in detail. It is desirable to point out, however, that some even of the comparatively recent descriptions intended to refer to A. capsularia seem, in reality, to belong to some other form. Thus É. Blanchard (1849) describes and figures under the name of A. salaris a small form, 20–35 mm. in length, having three lips already visible, a lateral caecum at the base of the oesophagus and female genital organs already developed.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1916

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

REFERENCES

Baird, W. (1853). Catalogue of the Species of Entozoa in the Collection of the British Museum.Google Scholar
Baird, W. (1868). [vide Murie, J., 1868.]Google Scholar
Blanchard, É. (1849). Recherches sur l'Organisation des Vers. Ann. Sci. Nat. (3), xi, 106.Google Scholar
Diesing, K. M. (1851). Systema Helminthum, ii.Google Scholar
Diesing, K. M. (1860). Revision der Nematoden. Sitzungsber. d. k. Akad. Wiss. Wien, xlii, (published 1861), 595.Google Scholar
Jägerskiöld, L. A. (1894). Beiträge zur Kenntniss der Nematoden. Zool. Jahrb. (Anat.), vii, 449.Google Scholar
Krabbe, H. (1878). Saelernes og Tandhvalernes Spolorme. K. Dansk. Vidensk. Selsk. Forh. 43.Google Scholar
Leiper, R. T. and Atkinson, E. L. (1914). Helminthes of the British Antarctic Expedition, 1910–1913. Proc. Zool. Soc. 222.Google Scholar
Leiper, R. T. and Atkinson, E. L. (1915). Parasitic Worms. British Antarctic (Terra Nova) Expedition, 1910, Zoology, ii, 19.Google Scholar
von Linstow, O. (1878). Neue Beobachtungen an Helminthen. Arch. f. Naturg. xliv, 218.Google Scholar
von Linstow, O. (1880). Helminthologische Untersuchungen. Arch. f. Naturg. xlvi, 41.Google Scholar
von Linstow, O. (1884). Helminthologisches. Arch. f. Naturg. l, 125.Google Scholar
von Linstow, O. (1888). Report on the Entozoa. Challenger Reports, Zoology, xxiii.Google Scholar
von Linstow, O. (1900). Die Nematoden, in Römer and Schaudinn, Fauna Arctica (Jena), i, 119.Google Scholar
Murie, J. (1868). On the Morbid Appearances observed in the Walrus lately living in the Society's Gardens. (With a description of a New Species of Ascaris found in the Stomach; by Dr Baird, F.L.S.) Proe. Zool. Soc. 67.Google Scholar
Pavoni, G. (1906). Sviluppo precoce degli organi della riproduzione in un Nematode Ascaris capsularia Rud. etc. Boll. Soc. Zool. Ital. (2), vii, 215.Google Scholar
Rudolphi, (1793). Observationes circa Vermes Intestinales (Part I), 13. (Greifs-wald.)Google Scholar
Rudolphi, (1802). Beobachtungen über die Eingeweidewürmer. Wiedemann's Archiv für Zoologie, n, n Stück, 1.Google Scholar
Rudolphi, (1809). Entozoorum Historia Naturalis.Google Scholar
Stewart, F. H. (1906). The Anatomy of Oncholaimus vulgaris, Bast., with Notes on two Parasitic Nematodes. Quart. Journ. Microsc. Sci. (n. ser.) l, 101.Google Scholar
Stiles, C. W. and Hassall, A. (1899). Internal Parasites of the Fur Seal. In The Fur Seals and Fur Seal Islands of the N. Pacific Ocean (Washington), Part III, 99.Google Scholar
Stossich, M. (1896). II Genere Ascaris Linné. Boll. Soc. Adriat. Sci. Nat. (Trieste), xvii, 9.Google Scholar