Experimental Infection of Physa heterostropha, Helisoma trivolvis, and Biomphalaria glabrata (Gastropoda) with Echinostoma revolutum (Trematoda) Cercariae
- 1 February 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Journal of Parasitology
- Vol. 73 (1) , 49-54
- https://doi.org/10.2307/3282342
Abstract
Gross and histologic studies were done on laboratory-raised Physa heterostropha, Helisoma trivolvis, and Biomphalaria glabrata snails exposed individually to 100 cercariae of Echinostoma revolutum. Cercariae showed a predisposition for the kidneys of snails. They entered the nephridiopore, migrated up the tubular kidney, and encysted in the saccular kidney within 2 hr. Considerably more cysts were in the kidney of B. glabrata at 24 hr than in H. trivolvis or P. heterostropha kidneys. Encysted metacercariae were not infective to domestic chicks at 2 hr, but were infective by 4 hr. Biomphalaria glabrata exposed to about 1,000 cercariae/snail and necropsied either 10 or 16 wk postexposure contained 300-500 cysts/kidney; about one-half the cysts were viable and infective to chicks. Biomphalaria glabrata is an excellent second intermediate host for the laboratory propagation of E. revolutum.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
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