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Contracaecum Multipapillatum (=C. Robustum) From Fishes And Birds In The Northern Gulf Of Mexico, Thomas L. Deardorff, Robin M. Overstreet
Contracaecum Multipapillatum (=C. Robustum) From Fishes And Birds In The Northern Gulf Of Mexico, Thomas L. Deardorff, Robin M. Overstreet
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
This note clarifies the taxonomic status of the ascaridoid Contracaecum robustum Chandler 1935 based on larval development, investigates the nematode's potential as a public health hazard, and reports the relative prevalence of it and related species along the northern Gulf of Mexico.
Brooks' Response To Holmes And Price, Daniel R. Brooks
Brooks' Response To Holmes And Price, Daniel R. Brooks
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
Daniel R. Brooks' response to Holmes and Price (Systematic Zoology, 29(2), 1980) regarding Brooks' views on the evolution of non-interactive parasite communities.
Biology And Pathogenesis Of The Coccidium Eimeria Funduli Infecting Killifishes, Mobashir A. Solangi, Robin M. Overstreet
Biology And Pathogenesis Of The Coccidium Eimeria Funduli Infecting Killifishes, Mobashir A. Solangi, Robin M. Overstreet
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
Epizootics of Eimeria funduli involved estuarine killifishes (Fundulus grandis, F. pulvereus, F. similis, and F. heteroclitus) in Mississippi, Alabama, and Virginia. All of more than 500 specimens examined of F. grandis from Mississippi during 1977 through 1979 had infections, regardless of age, sex, or season collected. Oocysts occurred primarily in the liver and pancreas, replacing up to 85% of both those organs. Infrequent sites of infection were fatty tissue of the body cavity, ovary, intestine, and caudal peduncle. Living fish did not discharge oocysts. Eimeria funduli is the first known eimerian to require a second host. To …
"Blinding" Of Shoots And A Leaf Gall In Amsinckia Intermedia Induced By Anguina Amsinckia (Steiner And Scott, 1934) (Nemata, Tylenchidae), With A Note On The Absence Of A Rachis In A. Amsinckia, C. Nagamine, Armarnd R. Maggenti
"Blinding" Of Shoots And A Leaf Gall In Amsinckia Intermedia Induced By Anguina Amsinckia (Steiner And Scott, 1934) (Nemata, Tylenchidae), With A Note On The Absence Of A Rachis In A. Amsinckia, C. Nagamine, Armarnd R. Maggenti
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
"Blinding" and a leaf gall induced on Amsinckia intermedia Fisch. and Mey. by Anguina amsinckia (Steiner and Scott) are described. A. amsinckia induced blinding by galling the terminal apical meristem of its host. The leaf gall was formed by a ventral curling of the distal edge of the leaf. The absence of a rachis in the ovary of A. amsinckia is noted.
Sarcocystis Of Passerine Birds: Sexual Stages In The Opossum (Didelphis Virginiana), Edith D. Box, Donald W. Duszynski
Sarcocystis Of Passerine Birds: Sexual Stages In The Opossum (Didelphis Virginiana), Edith D. Box, Donald W. Duszynski
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
Sexual stages of a Sarcocystis of passerine birds were demonstrated by feeding muscle cysts from cowbirds (Molothrus ater) and grackles (Cassidix mexicanus) to opossums (Didelphis virginiana). Opossums were examined at necropsy at 36 h, 13.5 days, and 29.5 days post-inoculation (PI). Large numbers of macro- and microgamonts were present in the small intestine 36 h PI, while only sporocysts and oocysts were present 13 days or more PI. Microgamonts in different stages of development were in the intestinal epithelium above the nucleus and macrogamonts were at the base of the epithelial cells or in …
Ultrastructure Of Sarcocystis Sporocysts From Passerine Birds And Opossums: Comments On Classification Of The Genus Isospora, Edith D. Box, Alan A. Marchiondo, Donald W. Duszynski, C. Patrick Davis
Ultrastructure Of Sarcocystis Sporocysts From Passerine Birds And Opossums: Comments On Classification Of The Genus Isospora, Edith D. Box, Alan A. Marchiondo, Donald W. Duszynski, C. Patrick Davis
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
Sporocysts were obtained from the feces of opossums (Didelphis virginiana) which had been fed muscles of passerine birds (Molothrus ater and Cassidix mexicanus) infected with Sarcocystis. Sporocysts were examined by phase microscopy and scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Ridges on the surface of the sporocysts outlined four plates. Thin sections of the sporocyst wall showed thickened regions and gaps interpreted as cross sections of the ridges. The sporocyst wall has four major layers with a thick, granular inner layer which resembles the inner layer of sporocysts of related species. Excystation structures are discussed as a …
Parasite Population Regulation: Lethal And Sublethal Effects Of Leptorhynchoides Thecatus (Acanthocephala: Rhadinorhynchidae) On Hyalella Azteca (Amphipoda), Richard L. Uznanski, Brent B. Nickol
Parasite Population Regulation: Lethal And Sublethal Effects Of Leptorhynchoides Thecatus (Acanthocephala: Rhadinorhynchidae) On Hyalella Azteca (Amphipoda), Richard L. Uznanski, Brent B. Nickol
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
The hypothesis that Leptorhynchoides thecatus populations are regulated by mortality of heavily infected intermediate hosts, Hyalella azteca, was examined experimentally. Mortality related to the infection process could not be demonstrated because no survivorship difference occurred between amphipod groups exposed to L. thecatus and unexposed control groups after 24 hours Likewise, amphipod mortality could not be associated with infection intensity during this period. Amphipod mortality, growth, and infection intensity were monitored for 25 days after a 24-hour exposure period. Cystacanths were infective to fish after 25 days. Survivorship of exposed amphipods was at least as great as that of unexposed …
Isospora Californica (Protozoa: Eimeriidae) In Peromyscus Maniculatus (Cricetidae) From White Sands National Monument, New Mexico, Lillian F. Mayberry, John R. Bristol, Donald W. Duszynski
Isospora Californica (Protozoa: Eimeriidae) In Peromyscus Maniculatus (Cricetidae) From White Sands National Monument, New Mexico, Lillian F. Mayberry, John R. Bristol, Donald W. Duszynski
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
Isospora californica (Protozoa: Eimeriidae) in Peromyscus maniculatus (Cricetidae) from White Sands National Monument, New Mexico
This report constitutes a new geographic record for Isospora californica and adds a micrograph of the coccidium, which the original description did not include. The latter is important because to correctly identify coccidia, a photograph as well as a drawing is at times necessary.
Epicharinema Keralense N. Gen, N. Sp., And Comments On Atylenchinae And Ecphyadophorinae (Nemata : Tylenchidae), Dewey J. Raski, Armand R. Maggenti, Puthenkandathil K. Koshy, Varghese K. Sosamma
Epicharinema Keralense N. Gen, N. Sp., And Comments On Atylenchinae And Ecphyadophorinae (Nemata : Tylenchidae), Dewey J. Raski, Armand R. Maggenti, Puthenkandathil K. Koshy, Varghese K. Sosamma
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
Epicharinema keralense n. gen., n. sp. is described from nematodes collected from soil about the roots of coconut palm in Kerala, India. This genus is related to Ecphyadophora and Ecphyadophoroides but differs from both by virtue of its greater length; larger stylet, spicules and gubernaculum; and its well-developed metacorpus with a prominent valve. E. keralense n. gen., n. sp. also has an elongate, sinuous cleft connected to the amphid which, with the valve in its metacorpus, indicates these belong to the family Tylenchidae. Relationship with Atylenchus and Eutylenchus is also considered and comments on the subfamilies Atylenchinae and Ecphyadophorinae are …
Diatoms In The Gills Of The Commercial White Shrimp, Robin M. Overstreet, Susan Safford
Diatoms In The Gills Of The Commercial White Shrimp, Robin M. Overstreet, Susan Safford
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
A white shrimp from Galveston, Texas, is the first reported case of a crustacean internally infected by a diatom. Even though more than one species occurred in debris on and between gill filaments, only individuals of Amphora sp. occurred within gills. To determine if a related diatom would easily reproduce within the shrimp and cause. a host response similar to that observed, we injected cultured specimens of A. coffaeformis into white shrimp. Under the experimental conditions, individuals of that species did not divide, but they elicited an extensive melanistic host-response.
Three Proteocephalid Cestodes From Colombian Siluriform Fishes, Including Nomimoscolex Alovarius Sp.N. (Monticelliidae: Z Ygobothriinae), Daniel R. Brooks, Thomas L. Deardorff
Three Proteocephalid Cestodes From Colombian Siluriform Fishes, Including Nomimoscolex Alovarius Sp.N. (Monticelliidae: Z Ygobothriinae), Daniel R. Brooks, Thomas L. Deardorff
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
Three species of proteocephalid cestodes were collected from Colombian siluriform fishes. Goezeella siluri Fuhrmann, 1916 is reported from Ageneiosus caucanus for the first time, and Colombia is a new locality. Goezeella siluri has a metascolex, biloculate suckers, and cortical gonads. Proteocephalideans possessing uniloculate suckers and cortical gonads represent two groupings. Those species possessing metascolices represent the genus Spatulifer Woodland, 1934, containing the species surubim, piramutab, piracatinga , rugosa , and rugata. Those lacking metascolices belong in Monticellia LaRue, 1911, comprising coryphicephala, lenha, megacephala, and spinulifera. New combinations include Spatulifer piramutab for Goezeella piramutab, S. piracatinga for Monticellia piracatinga, …
Cestodes In Four Species Of Euryhaline Stingrays From Colombia, Daniel R. Brooks, Monte A. Mayers
Cestodes In Four Species Of Euryhaline Stingrays From Colombia, Daniel R. Brooks, Monte A. Mayers
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
Seven species of cestodes are reported from coastal stingrays in the vicinity of Cartagena, Colombia, Acanthobothrium colombianum sp,n. from Aetobatis narinari resembles A . paulum and A. mathiasi but differs by having relatively shorter, more squared proglottids at the end of the strobila, a pre-equatorial genital pore, relatively less elongate ovarian lobes in terminal proglottids, and less prominent apical suckers and pads. Acanthobothrium urotrygoni sp.n. from Urotrygon venezuelae most closely resembles A . olseni in bothridial hook length but differs in cirrus sac size, resembles A. southwelli in cirrus sac size but differs in bothridial hook length, and differs from …
Redescription Of Diandrya Composita Darrah, 1930 (Cestoda: Anoplocephalidae) From Nearctic Marmots (Rodentia: Sciuridae) And The Relationships Of The Genus Diandrya Emend., Robert L. Rausch
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
According to the original description of Diandrya composita Darrah, 1930 (the type and only species of the Nearctic genus Diandrya Darrah, 1930) , this cestode would possess a combination of organs, the "interproglottidal glands" and "pedunculated prostate glands," otherwise unknown in any member of the Anoplocephalidae. Neither of these organs is present in D. composita . This species is redescribed and the generic diagnosis is emended accordingly. Diandrya composita has its closest affinities with cestodes of the genus Andrya Railliet, 1893, from which it differs significantly only in reduplication of the reproductive organs.
Two New Species Of Cestode (Trypanorhyncha, Eutetrarhynchidae) From The Yellow-Spotted Stingray, Urolophus Jamaicensis, Kinga J. Kovacs, Gerald D. Schmidt
Two New Species Of Cestode (Trypanorhyncha, Eutetrarhynchidae) From The Yellow-Spotted Stingray, Urolophus Jamaicensis, Kinga J. Kovacs, Gerald D. Schmidt
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
Eutetrarhynchus thalassius sp.n. and Eutetrarhynchus caribbensis sp.n. were collected from the spiral valves of three yellow-spotted stingrays, Urolophus jamaicensis, in Discovery Bay, Jamaica. Both species most closely resemble Eutetrarhynchus geraschmidti Dollfus, 1974. Eutetrarhynchus thalassius differs from E. geraschmidti in the arrangement, sizes, and shapes of tentacular armature, Eutetrarhynchus caribbensis differs from E. geraschmidti and E. thalassius on the basis of metabasal armature. The tentacular armature of E. geraschmidti is redescribed,
Epicharinema Keralense N. Gen, N. Sp., And Comments On Atylenchinae And Ecphyadophorinae (Nemata: Tylenchidae), Dewey J. Raski, Armand R. Maggenti, P. K. Koshy, V. K. Sosamma
Epicharinema Keralense N. Gen, N. Sp., And Comments On Atylenchinae And Ecphyadophorinae (Nemata: Tylenchidae), Dewey J. Raski, Armand R. Maggenti, P. K. Koshy, V. K. Sosamma
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
Epicharinema keralense n. gen., n. sp. is described from nematodes collected from soil about the roots of coconut palm in Kerala, India. This genus is related to Ecphyadophora and Ecphyadophoroides but differs from both by virtue of its greater length ; larger stylet, spicules and gubernaculum; and its well-developed metacorpus with a prominent valve. E. keralense n. gen., n. sp. also has an elongate, sinuous cleft connected to the amphid which, with the valve in its metacorpus, indicates these belong to the family Tylenchidae. Relationship with Atylenchus and Eutylenchus is also considered and comments on the subfamilies Atylenchinae and Ecphyadophorinae …
Arapaho Prairie, Arthur County, Nebraska: Approximate Ap Grid For Gis, Kathleen H. Keeler, A. T. Harrison, L. S. Vescio
Arapaho Prairie, Arthur County, Nebraska: Approximate Ap Grid For Gis, Kathleen H. Keeler, A. T. Harrison, L. S. Vescio
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
Grid map of field sites at Arapaho Prairie in Arthur County, Nebraska. Scale 1 5/16" = 1/4 mile. Shows permanently marked vegetation quadrats, blowouts and ravine washouts, roads, and 100' contour intervals. Part of the map was destroyed by mice. What remains of the map as of 2013 is shown.
Occurrence Of Quadrigyrus Torquatus Van Cleave, 1920 (Acanthocephala) In North-Central Colombia, South America, Richard L. Buckner, Daniel R. Brooks
Occurrence Of Quadrigyrus Torquatus Van Cleave, 1920 (Acanthocephala) In North-Central Colombia, South America, Richard L. Buckner, Daniel R. Brooks
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
During June and July of 1975 and 1976, fish of the Magdalena River basin in Colombia, South America, were examined for acanthocephalans, A total of 16 species of fish were collected from the departments of Caldas and Bolivar. Worms were fixed in AFA and stained in Mayer's carmalum,
New Host And Locality For Kathlania Leptura (Rudolphi) (Nematoda: Oxyurata: Kathlanidae), Daniel R. Brooks, Jack Frazier
New Host And Locality For Kathlania Leptura (Rudolphi) (Nematoda: Oxyurata: Kathlanidae), Daniel R. Brooks, Jack Frazier
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
Marine testudines are known to host two species of kathlanid nematodes, Kathlania leptura (Rudolphi, 1819) Travassos, 1918 and Tonaudia tonaudia (Lane, 1914) Travassos, 1918, Each species has been reported infrequently but exhibits a wide geographic distribution. Both K. leptura and T. tonaudia have been reported from Ceylon and from the Mediterranean Sea near Egypt, and K. leptura has been reported also from the coast of Brazil (Skrjabin, Shikhobalova, and Lagodovskaya, 1964, in Skrjabin (ed,) Essentials of Nematodology, vol. 13, part 3, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, English translation, 1976, TT75-50011, U.S. Department of Commerce, NTIS, Springfield, Virginia 22151), This …
Cephalic Papillae Of Giant Kidney Nematode Dioctophyma Renale (Goeze, 1782) And Comparison With Eustrongylides Spp., J. R. Lichtenfels, P. A. Madden
Cephalic Papillae Of Giant Kidney Nematode Dioctophyma Renale (Goeze, 1782) And Comparison With Eustrongylides Spp., J. R. Lichtenfels, P. A. Madden
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
Cephalic papillae of third- and fifth-stage Dioctophyma renale and fourth- and fifth-stage Eustrongylides spp. were found to be of three kinds in addition to the amphids. In all the stages of both genera studied, six papillae were in an internal circle, six in an external circle, and eight to 10 in two lateral fields of four or five each between the internal and external circles. Amphids were closely associated with the externolateral papillae. Another porelike papilla was found between the ventroventral papillae in all but fifth-stage D. renale. In third-stage D. renale, lateral rows of somatic papillae were …
Taxonomy And Biology Of North American Species Of Goezia (Nematoda: Anisakidae) From Fishes, Including Three New Species, Thomas L. Deardorff, Robin M. Overstreet
Taxonomy And Biology Of North American Species Of Goezia (Nematoda: Anisakidae) From Fishes, Including Three New Species, Thomas L. Deardorff, Robin M. Overstreet
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
Three new species of Goezia from fishes in North America are described and supplemental data for G. minuta and several unidentified adults and larvae are presented. Males, especially their caudal papillae, are necessary to identify most species. For the new species, G. pelagia sp. n. from Rachycentron canadum and Chaetodipterus faber in the northern Gulf of Mexico possesses 12- 19 preanal, two para-anal, and four postanal pairs of papillae; G. kliksi sp. n. from Pogonias cromis in Lake Borgne, Louisiana, has 10-16 preanal, two para-anal, and five postanal pairs of papillae, and G. sinamora sp. n. from Tilapia aurea, …
Cestode Parasites Of Some Venezuelan Stingrays, Monte A. Mayes, Daniel R. Brooks
Cestode Parasites Of Some Venezuelan Stingrays, Monte A. Mayes, Daniel R. Brooks
Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications
Forty-seven stingrays representing 8 species collected in Venezuelan coastal waters were examined for cestode parasites. Specimens of 18 tetraphyllidean, lecanicephalidean, and trypanorhynchan cestode species were collected, 3 described as new. Rhinebothrium margaritense sp. n. from Dasyatis guttata and D. americana most closely resembles R. spinicephalum and R. tetralobatum but differs by having 3-6 rather than only 2 testes per proglottid and a different number of bothridial loculi. Rhodobothrium paucitesticulare sp. n. from Rhinoptera bonasus possesses fewer than half as many testes per proglottid as any other known member of the genus. Dioecotaenia campbelli sp. n. differs from D. cancellata by …