Molluscs interfering with the capacity of Fasciola hepatica miracidia to infect Lymnaea truncatula
- 30 September 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Parasitology
- Vol. 73 (2), 161-167
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0031182000046849
Abstract
Fasciola hepatica miracidia labelled with radioselenium were used to study aspects of their host-finding capacity by determining radioactivity subsequently taken up by exposed ‘target’ snails (Lymnaea truncatula). Possible interfering effects exercised by a number of non-host snails and bivalves were examined in linear test channels. The infection rate (radioactivity) among ‘target’ snails was markedly lowered when non-host Lymnaea species (L. pereger, L. palustris, L. stagnalis) were interposed as ‘decoys’. The prosobranch Bithynia tentaculata and the bivalve Sphaeriwm corneum exhibited a slight decoy effect whereas pulmonate species like Anisus vortex, Gyraulus albus, Planorbis planorbis, Physa fontinalis did not interfere with miracidial host-finding.Other experiments showed that miracidia are more strongly attracted towards L. truncatula than L. pereger. Miracidia are not able to penetrate intact egg clusters of L. truncatula.Keywords
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