Experimental studies of infection dynamics: infection of the definitive host by the cercariae of Transversotrema patialense
- 1 October 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Parasitology
- Vol. 77 (2) , 189-200
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0031182000049386
Abstract
Summary: The number of cercariae of Transversotrema patialense which attach to the fish host Brachydanio rerio, during a fixed exposure period, is shown to be directly proportional to cercarial density within an experimental infection arena. The distribution of successful infections/host is shown to change from a random pattern to an over-dispersed form as cercarial exposure density or duration of host exposure to infection increases. A stochastic simulation model is used to demonstrate that small differences in host susceptibility to infection, within a population of hosts, can generate patterns of dispersion in parasite numbers/host similar to those observed in the experimental studies. Differences in host behaviour, during the period of exposure to infection, are thought to generate variability in host susceptibility to cercarial infection.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Concomitant Predation and Infection Processes: An Experimental StudyJournal of Animal Ecology, 1978
- The regulation of host population growth by parasitic speciesParasitology, 1978
- Dynamical aspects of host-parasite associations: Crofton's model revisitedParasitology, 1977
- Survival characteristics of the free-living cercarial population of the ectoparasitic digenean Transversotrema patialensis (Soparker, 1924)Parasitology, 1975
- Frequency distributions of parasites in a population of three-spined sticklebacks,Gasterosteus aculeatusL., with particular reference to the negative binomial distributionParasitology, 1971
- A quantitative approach to parasitismParasitology, 1971
- On the statistical analysis of worm counts in chickensExperimental Parasitology, 1958
- The Measurement of Interspecific AssociatonEcology, 1949
- On the parasites of silver foxes on some farms in the south-westParasitology, 1942
- Studies on populations of head-lice (Pediculus humanus capitis: Anoplura)Parasitology, 1940