Search results for "Cestode Infections"

showing 5 items of 25 documents

Finnish salmon resistant to Gyrodactylus salaris: a long-term study at fish farms.

1996

Abstract The occurrence of Gyrodactylus salaris on Baltic salmon ( Salmo salar ), sea trout ( S. trutta m. trutta ) and brown trout ( S. trutta m. lacustris ) was examined from 1984 to 1993 at 4 fish farms (A, B, C and D) that produce smolts for stocking in northern Finland. No G. salaris was found on the sea or brown trout, but it did occur on salmon for 6–7 years at farms B, C and D, the prevalences of infection being 9.5%, 17.7% and 8.8% for salmon yearlings and smolts during that time, respectively, but less than 1.2% for fingerlings at farms B and C. Only brood stock salmon were infected at farm A in 4 years. The abundances of G. salaris increased during the second winter of each year …

TroutFish farmingFisheriesBroodstockBrown troutFish DiseasesStockingSalmonmedicineAnimalsSalmoSalmonidaeFinlandbiologySeasonalitybiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseCestode InfectionsImmunity InnateFisheryInfectious DiseasesGyrodactylus salarisCestodaRegression AnalysisParasitologySeasonsInternational journal for parasitology
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The Asian Taenia and the possibility of cysticercosis

2000

In certain Asian countries, a third form of human Taenia, also known as the Asian Taenia, has been discovered. This Asian Taenia seems to be an intermediate between Taenia solium and T. saginata since in morphological terms it is similar to T. saginata, yet biologically, as it uses the same intermediate host (pigs), it is more akin to T. solium. Taenia solium causes human cysticercosis, while T. saginata does not. It is not known whether the Asian taeniid is able to develop to the larval stage in humans or not. The arguments proposed by those authors who consider it unlikely that the Asian Taenia causes human cysticercosis are: (a) its molecular similarities with T. saginata; (b) the absenc…

Veterinary medicineAsiaZoologyBiologydigestive systemparasitic diseasesTaenia soliumPrevalencemedicineAsian countryAnimalsHumansHelminthsIntestinal Diseases ParasiticCestode infectionsTaeniaCysticercosismusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyIntermediate hostCysticercosisMini-Reviewmusculoskeletal systemmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.drug_formulation_ingredientInfectious DiseasesLarvaTaeniaParasitologyThe Korean Journal of Parasitology
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Segregation and co-occurrence of larval cestodes in freshwater fishes in the Bothnian Bay, Finland

1992

SUMMARYTwo autogenic (Triaenophorus crassus and T. nodulosus) and four allogenic (Diphyllobothrium latum, D. dendriticum, D. ditremum and Schistocephalus solidus) larval cestode species were found in 13 out of 31 fish species studied from the Bothnian Bay, NE Baltic. Gasterosteus aculeatus was the most heavily infected fish with 4 larval cestode species; for two of them (D. ditremum and S. solidus) the three-spined stickleback was found to be the required fish intermediate host. Among allogenic cestode species, those restricted to different definitive host species segregated their larval population in relation to the fish host, while, for example, D. ditremum and S. solidus, both maturing i…

education.field_of_studyDiphyllobothrium latumRange (biology)EcologyPopulationCestodaFishesIntermediate hostSticklebackGasterosteusBiologyCestode Infectionsbiology.organism_classificationFish DiseasesInfectious DiseasesSchistocephalus solidusAnimalsCestodaAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyeducationFinlandParasitology
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On the infracommunity structure of adult cestodes in freshwater fishes.

1990

The distribution–co-occurrence and exchange of adult cestode species in two fish communities (the Bothnian Bay and Lake Yli-Kitka both in Finland) was studied. Coexistence of two or more mature cestode species in the same fish host population was zero for all fish species studied (33) except pike in the Bothnian Bay and whitefish in the lake. It was found that 60% of the fish species studied in the Bothnian Bay and 80% of the fish species studied from Lake Yli-Kitka harboured only 1 mature cestode species. Exchange of adult cestode species between the different fish species in these two fish communities was found to be as rare as coexistence. The infra-community structure of adult cestodes …

education.field_of_studybiologyEcologyHost (biology)Adult CestodePopulationCestodaFishesFresh Waterbiology.organism_classificationCestode InfectionsFish DiseasesInfectious DiseasesFreshwater fishParasite hostingAnimalsCestodaAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyeducationcomputerBayFinlandPikecomputer.programming_languageParasitology
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First report on the helminthfauna of the yellow-necked mouse, Apodemus flavicollis, in the Iberian Peninsula

2016

Summary Information about the prevalence of helminth parasites of the yellow-necked mouse, Apodemus flavicollis, in the Iberian Peninsula is almost non-existent and there is no reliable data reported from Spain. Fourteen A. flavicollis from the Erro River valley (Navarre, Spain) were examined for endoparasites, between February 2001 and July 2002. Thirteen specimens (92.9 %) of the total sample were parasitized by at least one of the following six helminth species: one trematode (Corrigia vitta), one cestode (Taenia parva larvae) and four nematodes (Trichuris muris, Calodium hepaticum, Heligmosomoides polygyrus and Syphacia stroma). This is the first report about the helminthfauna of A. fla…

yellow-necked mouse0301 basic medicineMedicine (General)TrichuriasisAgriculture (General)Ecology (disciplines)ZoologyBiologyS1-97203 medical and health sciencesR5-920Peninsulaparasitic diseasesmedicineHelminthsTaeniasisCestode infectionserro river valleygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryapodemus flavicollis030108 mycology & parasitologymedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationhumanitieshelminth communityiberian peninsulaCapillariasisApodemusAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyHelminthologia
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