Search results for "Trichuridae"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Hepatic parasitosis in two wood mice, Apodemus sylvaticus (Rodentia: Muridae), due to Aonchotheca annulosa (Nematoda: Trichuridae), and Eucoleus baci…

2014

AbstractAonchotheca annulosa and Eucoleus bacillatus are two capillariin nematodes parasitizing the intestinal and stomach mucosa, respectively, of various rodent species, and two, among others, component species of the helminth fauna of the wood mouse, Apodemus sylvaticus. A capillariin each was found in the liver parenchyma of two wood mice in a post-fire regeneration enclave in Serra Calderona Natural Park (Valencian Community, Spain). Due to their location, the preliminary identification of the helminths corresponded to Calodium hepaticum, a hepatic capillariin with rodents as its main host. So far, this species had never been found in Serra Calderona. To verify the preliminary identifi…

MaleNematodaRodentbiologyEcologyFaunaZoologyParasitismbiology.organism_classificationRodent DiseasesWood mouseTrichuridaebiology.animalApodemusAnimalsHelminthsFemaleParasitologyMurinaeNematode InfectionsMuridaeActa Parasitologica
researchProduct

Differentiation of Trichuris species using a morphometric approach

2019

Trichuris trichiura is a nematode considered as the whipworm present in humans and primates. The systematics of the genus Trichuris is complex. Morphological studies of Trichuris isolated from primates and humans conclude that the species infecting these hosts is the same. Furthermore, numerous molecular studies have been carried out so far to discriminate parasite species from humans and Non-Human Primates using molecular techniques, but these studies were not performed in combination with a parallel morphological study. The hypothesised existence of more species of Trichuris in primates opens the possibility to revise the zoonotic potential and host specificity of T. trichiura and other p…

MorphometricsSystematicsPrimatesspecific differentiationTrichurisZoologyBiologybiology.organism_classificationInfectious DiseasesNematodeTrichurisTrichuridaeGenuslcsh:ZoologyTrichuris trichiuraHelminthsAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologylcsh:QL1-991MorphometricsInternational Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife
researchProduct