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The incidence and distribution in Britain of the trematodes of Talpa europaea
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 April 2009
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1. Moles were collected from four main areas, Suffolk, Cheshire-Staffordshire, Westmorland-Yorkshire, and south-west Scotland, and examined for the presence of flukes. Three species were found: Itygonimus lorum from all the areas (and in one mole from Oxford); I ocreatus from Suffolk; Omphalometra flexuosa from Suffolk and Cheshire-Staffordshire.
2. The sex of the host has no effect on the incidence of parasitism with flukes.
3. I. lorum is almost exclusively a parasite of the lower half of the intestine, whereas I.ocreatus and O. flexuosa are predominantly parasites of the upper half of the intestine.
4. The commonest number of flukes of any of the three species to find in a mole is one, though two individuals is almost as common a number in the case of I. lorum. Nevertheless, large populations of I. ocreatus or O. flexuosa and moderate numbers of I. lorum are on occasion found in one mole.
5. Premunition does not occur with infestations of I. lorum and probably not with I. ocreatus and O. flexuosa.
6. The distribution of each species even within an area where it occurs is very patchy and local. This is probably bound up with restricted movement of the hosts, whether final or intermediate, and may also be associated with the influence of soil conditions on the intermediate hosts.
7. There appears to be no seasonal variation in the presence of flukes in moles.
8. Simultaneous infestation with more than one species of fluke is rare. It is possible for O. flexuosa to live in company with I. lorum or I. Ocreatus, but the two Itygonimus species were never found together in the same mole.
9. The presence of flukes in a mole has no effect on the rest of the intestinal helminth population of the host.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1959
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