On the Morphology and Life History ofFasciola nyanzaeLeiper, 1910 from the Hippopotamus
- 1 March 1961
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Helminthology
- Vol. 35 (S1) , 53-62
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022149x00017570
Abstract
A half a century ago, R. T. Leiper described a new species belonging to the genus Fasciola from specimens which he collected from hippopotami at the Murchison Falls, on the Victoria Nile in Uganda, in the summer of 1907. This species, Fasciola nyanzae, was found in the bile ducts of the liver, and in most instances the specimens were somewhat macerated owing to the length of time that had elapsed before the animal could be recovered from the water. Nevertheless, the characteristic shape of these liver flukes and the restriction of the branched testes to the anterior third of the body made it possible to recognise them as being different from all other species of the genus known at that time.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Studien über die Phylogenie der Trematoden. VI. The life histories of some American liver flukesZeitschrift Fur Parasitenkunde-Parasitology Research, 1933
- A Revision of the Genus Fasciola. With particular reference to F. gigantica (Cobbold) and F. nyanzi (Leiper)Parasitology, 1921
- The Entozoa of the Hippopotamus.Journal of Zoology, 1910