Search results for "intermediate host"

showing 10 items of 87 documents

Insights into the relationships of Palearctic and Nearctic lymnaeids (Mollusca : Gastropoda) by rDNA ITS-2 sequencing and phylogeny of stagnicoline i…

2003

Fascioliasis by Fasciola hepatica is the vector-borne disease presenting the widest latitudinal, longitudinal and altitudinal distribution known. F. hepatica shows a great adaptation power to new environmental conditions which is the consequence of its own capacities together with the adaptation and colonization abilities of its specific vector hosts, freshwater snails of the family Lymnaeidae. Several lymnaeid species only considered as secondary contributors to the liver fluke transmission have, however, played a very important role in the geographic expansion of this disease. Many of them belong to the so-called "stagnicoline" type group. Stagnicolines have, therefore, a very important a…

CanadaVeterinary (miscellaneous)SnailsZoologyDisease VectorsDNA RibosomalRibotypingrDNA ITS-2 sequenceslymnaea occultalcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseasesHolarcticSpecies SpecificityPhylogeneticsHepaticaSequence Homology Nucleic AcidOmphiscola glabraAnimalslcsh:RC109-216PhylogenyLymnaeaGalba truncatulabiologyPhylogenetic treeArctic RegionsIntermediate hostHolarctic stagnicolinesFasciola hepaticabiology.organism_classificationEuropeInfectious DiseasesInsect ScienceAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyTaxonomy (biology)L. palustris turriculaParasite
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Production and chronobiology of emergence of the cercariae of Euparyphium albuferensis (Trematoda: Echinostomatidae).

1999

The production and the chronobiology of emergence of the cercariae of Euparyphium albuferensis from Gyraulus chinensis experimentally infected with a single miracidium were established during 28 consecutive days from the first day of cercarial shedding. Moreover, the effect of a sudden change in light-dark cycling was investigated. Although the daily cercarial shedding rates show great variability, a progressive increase in cercarial production was observed in the first weeks of the cercarial shedding periods, probably in relation to the demography of intramollusean larval stages. Under 12:12 light-dark cycling condition;, it, albuferensis cercariae emerged in the light, and the rhythm was …

Chronobiology PhenomenaEchinostomatidaeChronobiologyLarvabiologyLightEcologySnailsIntermediate hostZoologyDarknessbiology.organism_classificationPulmonataEchinostomatidaeCircadian RhythmHost-Parasite InteractionsAnimalsParasitologyCircadian rhythmTrematodaGyraulus chinensisEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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The natural history of Echinorhynchus bothniensis Zdzitowiecki and Valtonen, 1987 (Acanthocephala) in a high Arctic lake

2015

The acanthocephalan Echinorhynchus bothniensis Zdzitowiecki and Valtonen, 1987 differs from most other species in the genus Echinorhynchus Zoega in Müller, 1776 by infecting mysids (order Mysida) instead of amphipods (order Amphipoda) as intermediate hosts. Here we report on the occurrence of E. bothniensis in mysids (Mysis segerstralei Audzijonytė et Väinölä) and in its fish definitive hosts in a high Arctic lake. Out of 15907 sampled mysids, 4.8% were infected with a mean intensity of 1.05 worms (range 1–5), although there was notable variation between samples taken in different years and sites. Larger mysids appear more likely to be infected. Of five fish species sampled, charr,Salvelinu…

Echinorhynchidaeintermediate hostMysissex ratiobody sizethorny-headed worms
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Helminth-Trematode: Echinostoma

2014

The term, echinostomes, includes those digeneans belonging to the family Echinostomatidae. Echinostomes are a rather heterogeneous group of cosmopolitan hermaphroditic digeneans that inhabit, as adults, the intestine of a great spectrum of vertebrate hosts, such as birds, mammals and, occasionally, reptiles and fishes. They can also parasitize humans causing the food-borne infection called echinostomiasis. The definitive hosts become infected after ingestion of the second intermediate host harboring the encysted metacercariae. Clinical symptoms of echinostomiasis include abdominal pain, violent watery diarrhea, and anorexia. The disease occurs focally and transmission is linked to fresh or …

EchinostomiasisbiologyEcologyTransmission (medicine)biology.animalIntermediate hostVertebrateHelminthsEchinostomaHypoderaeum conoideumbiology.organism_classificationEchinostomatidae
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Low-altitude outbreaks of human fascioliasis related with summer rainfall in Gilan province, Iran

2011

Following human fascioliasis outbreaks in 1988 and 1999 in Gilan province, northern Iran, efforts are now made to shed light on the seasonal pattern of fascioliasis transmission in this endemic area, taking into account snail host populations, climatic conditions and human cases. Populations of the intermediate host snail (Lymnaea spp.) peak in May and November, while there is a fourfold increase in the rate of human fascioliasis in February compared to that of September. Transmission is likely to occur mainly in late autumn and sporadically in late spring. Rainfall, seasonally analysed in periods of 3 years, indicates that accumulated summer rainfall may be related with the 1988 and 1999 h…

FascioliasisHealth (social science)RainGeography Planning and Developmentlcsh:G1-922Medicine (miscellaneous)Climate changeDisease VectorsIranDisease Outbreakslaw.inventionEffects of global warminglawAnimalsHumansfascioliasis human outbreak summer rainfall Iran.LymnaeaAbiotic componentBiotic componentEcologyHealth PolicyIntermediate hostOutbreakTransmission (mechanics)GeographyHuman fascioliasisSeasonslcsh:Geography (General)Geospatial health
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Is the population genetic structure of complex life cycle parasites determined by the geographic range of the most motile host?

2010

Due to their particular way of life, dispersal of parasites is often mediated by their host's biology. Dispersal distance is relevant for parasites because high degree of dispersal leads to high gene flow, which counters the rate of parasite local adaptation in the host populations. Parasites with complex life cycles need to exploit sequentially more than one host species to complete their life cycle. Most trematode parasites have such complex life cycles involving invertebrate and vertebrate hosts. The spatial scales of invertebrate and vertebrate host populations are often different, which may decrease the probability that the parasite cycles locally in the intermediate host population. W…

Gene Flow0106 biological sciencesMicrobiology (medical)Population DynamicsPopulationZoologyTrematode InfectionsBiologyPolymerase Chain Reaction010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesMicrobiologyHost-Parasite InteractionsCharadriiformesFish Diseases03 medical and health sciencesGeneticsAnimalseducationMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsLymnaea030304 developmental biologyLocal adaptationIsolation by distanceLife Cycle Stages0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyPolymorphism GeneticBase SequenceGeographyBird DiseasesHost (biology)FishesIntermediate hostGenetic Variationbiology.organism_classificationObligate parasiteInfectious DiseasesBiological dispersalAnimal MigrationDNA IntergenicTrematodaTrematodaMicrosatellite RepeatsInfection, Genetics and Evolution
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Larval morphology, genetic divergence, and contrasting levels of host manipulation between forms of Pomphorhynchus laevis (Acanthocephala)

2004

Studies on parasite species with a wide geographic and ecological range may be confounded by still equivocal taxonomic identification. Here, we investigated genetic polymorphism and behavioural changes induced in a common intermediate host, in two different forms of Pomphorhynchus laevis based on the morphology of the larval infective stage (cystacanth). A 'smooth type' (S) and a 'wrinkled type' (W) of cystacanth were distinguished based on their surface and shape. We analysed sequence divergence at both nuclear (ribosomal gene 18S rDNA, and ribosomal internal transcribed spacers, ITS1/ITS2) and mitochondrial (cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1) genes of P. laevis cystacanths and adults at vari…

GeneticsBase SequencebiologyMolecular Sequence DataIntermediate hostRibosomal RNAbiology.organism_classificationAcanthocephalaHost-Parasite InteractionsEvolution MolecularGenetic divergenceGammarus pulexInfectious DiseasesSpecies SpecificityEvolutionary biologyLarvabiology.proteinAnimalsCytochrome c oxidaseParasitologyPomphorhynchus laevisAcanthocephalaSequence AlignmentRibosomal DNAGenes HelminthInternational Journal for Parasitology
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Conflict between co-occurring parasites as a confounding factor in manipulation studies?

2005

In their review, Thomas et al. (2005) highlight that, in cases where multiple infections occur in the same intermediate host individual, parasitic manipulation may be the result of not just a single parasite, but may be the cumulative effect of infection by two or more manipulating parasites. Such parasites may be in conflict when they share the same intermediate host but have different final hosts: they may manipulate the host in different ways in order to effect their different transmission p T c r s t s

GeneticsBehavioral NeuroscienceCo occurringHost (biology)Transmission (medicine)ConfoundingIntermediate hostAnimal Science and ZoologyGeneral MedicineBiologyAdaptationCumulative effectMultiple infectionsBehavioural Processes
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Presence of Pomphorhynchus laevis in Salamandra salamandra

1995

AbstractInfection of Salamandra salamandra larvae (Amphibia: Urodela) with the fish acanthocephalan Pomphorhynchus laevis was detected in a fish-free mountain brook. Gammarus fossarum was found to be the intermediate host. The parasites were probably inadvertently introduced through fish breeding practices. Evidence was obtained that Pomphorhynchus laevis persists, at least for several months, in postmetamorphic fire salamanders.

InfectivitybiologyEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectIntermediate hostZoologyGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationParasite hostingAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyPomphorhynchus laevisSalamandraMetamorphosisAcanthocephalamedia_commonCaudataJournal of Helminthology
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Intestinal Trematode Infections

2014

Intestinal trematodes are among the most common types of parasitic worms. About 76 species belonging to 14 families have been recorded infecting humans. Infection commonly occurs when humans eat raw or undercooked foods that contain the infective metacercariae. These parasites are diverse in regard to their morphology, geographical distribution and life cycle, which make it difficult to study the parasitic diseases that they cause. Many of these intestinal trematodes have been considered as endemic parasites in the past. However, the geographical limits and the population at risk are currently expanding and changing in relation to factors such as growing international markets, improved tran…

International marketeducation.field_of_studybiologyIntestinal trematodePopulationIntermediate hostHelminthsZoologyTrematodaEating habitsbiology.organism_classificationPathogenicityeducation
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