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Description and life history of Cardicola alseae sp.n. (Trematoda : Sanguinicolidae)

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Title Description and life history of Cardicola alseae sp.n. (Trematoda : Sanguinicolidae)
Names Meade, Thomas Gerald (creator)
Pratt, Ivan (advisor)
Date Issued 1964-12-09 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1965
Abstract Cardicola alseae is a blood dwelling trematode found in the
fishes Salmo clarki henshawi and Salmo gairdneri gairdneri. Eggs
which were ovoid in shape and non-operculate left the adult and passed
to the gill capillaries of the secondary lamellae. The miracidium was
ovoid, 0.070 mm. long by 0.052 mm. wide, covered with long cilia,
and internally had an eyespot composed of 40 to 50 melanin granules.
The miracidium was encased in an egg capsule which enlarged prior
to eruption and release of the larva. Sporocysts were found in the
visceral mass of the snail Oxytrema silicula (Gould). No mother
sporocyst generation was identified. Percentage of infection was Iow,
with infected snails having sporocysts of equal size, Usually one to
three adult cercariae were present in each sporocyst, along with
germinal balls in many stages of development. Cercariae were of
the lophocercous, furcocercous, brevifurcate, apharyngeate type
with furcae possessing claws on the tips. A delicate dorsal keel extended at least three-fourths the length of the body and reached its
widest point at the dorsal bend of the body. If a cercaria touched the
soft part of a potential host, it would attach, drop its tail, and penetrate
within 15 to 20 minutes.
The adult fluke was removed from blood vessels of the giIls,
liver, mesenteries, and kidneys. It was covered with small spines,
possessed a highly saccular testis, subterminal mouth, an H-shaped
intestine, and lacked a pharynx. The fluke appeared to possess the
characteristics of the genus Cardicola. C. alseae differs from the
other two blood flukes found in salmonid fish in the morphology of the
cercaria, size of the adult worm, number of rows of marginal spines,
forrn of the testis and ovary, and shape of the excretory bladder and
intestine.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Trematoda
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/48195

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