Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jn8rn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-29T18:24:20.587Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Cercaria diplostomi phoxini (Faust), a furcocercaria which develops into Diplostomulum phoxini in the brain of the minnow

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

Gwendolen Rees
Affiliation:
Department of Zoology, University College of Wales, Aberystwyth

Extract

1. A fork-tailed cercaria Cercaria diplostomi phoxini (Faust) has been found to develop in sporocysts in 3·9 % of Lymnaea pereger var. ovata (Drapanaud) in Fron Goch Pool near Aberystwyth.

2. The cercaria is described in detail. The arrangement of spines on the body is characteristic and there is a double row of seventy-two spines on the ventral sucker. The flame cell formula is given.

3. The cercaria is compared with seven closely related types.

4. Infestation experiments show that Cercaria diplostomi phoxini develops into Diplostomulum phoxini in the brain of the minnow.

5. The early stage of infestation of the brain of the minnow is described and compared with an infestation of long standing.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1957

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

Arvy, L. (1954). Distomatose cérébro-rachidienne due à Diplostomulum phoxini (Faust), Hughes 1929, chez Phoxinus laevis Ag. Ann. Parasit. hum. comp. 29, 510–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arvy, L. & Buttner, A. (1954). Données sur le cycle évolutif de Diplostomulum phoxini (Faust 1918) (Trematoda, Diplostomidae). C.R. Acad. Sci., Paris, 239, 1085–7.Google Scholar
Arvy, L. & Buttner, A. (1955). Cycle évolutif de Diplostomulum phoxini (Faust, 1918) (Diplostomatidae). Bull. Soc. Zool. Fr. 80, 104.Google Scholar
Ashworth, A. W. & Bannerman, I. C. W. (1927). On a Tetracotyle (T. phoxini) in the brain of the minnow. Trans. Roy. Soc. Edinb. 55, 159–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, F. J. (1926). Some British fresh-water larval trematodes with contributions to their life histories. Parasitology, 18, 2134.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, F. J. (1931). Some fresh-water larval trematodes from Cheshire. Parasitology, 23, 8893.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cort, W. W. & Brackett, S. (1937). Two new species of strigeid cercariae from the Douglas Lake region, Michigan. J. Parasit. 23, 265–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cort, W. W. & Brooks, S. T. (1928). Studies on the holostome cercariae from Douglas Lake, Michigan. Trans. Amer. Micr. Soc. 47, 179221.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davis, D. J. (1936). Pathological studies on the penetration of the cercaria of the strigeid trematode, Diplostomum flexicaudum. J. Parasit. 22, 108–10.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dubois, G. (1944). A propos de la spécificité parasitaire des Strigeida. Bull. Soc. neuchâtel. Sci. nat. 69, 5103.Google Scholar
Faust, E. C. (1918). The anatomy of Tetracotyle iturbei Faust, with a synopsis of described tetracotyliform larvae. J. Parasit. 5, 6979.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Faust, E. C. (1919). The excretory system in Digenea. II. Biol. Bull., Woods Hole, 36, 322–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
van Haitsma, J. P. (1931). Studies on the trematode family Strigeidae (Holostomidae). No. XXIII. Diplostomum flexicatidum (Cort & Brooks) and stages in its life history. Pap. Mich. Acad. Sci. 13, 1930, 483516.Google Scholar
Hesse, A. J. (1923). A description of the two cercariae found in Lymnaea pereger in Scotland. J. Helminth. 1, 227–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mataré, F. (1909). Ueber eine neue Tetracotyle im Hirn von Phoxinus laevis. Z. wiss. Zool. 94, 488540.Google Scholar
Miller, H. M. (1923). Notes on some furocercous larval trematodes. J. Parasit. 10, 3546.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rees, G. (1955). The adult and diplostomulum stage (Diplostomulum phoxini (Faust)) of Diplostomum pelmatoides Dubois and an experimental demonstration of part of the life cycle. Parasitology, 45, 295312.CrossRefGoogle Scholar