The germ-cell cycle and method of reproduction in the daughter sporocysts of the bucephalid Cercaria bucephalopsis haimeana (Lacaze-Duthiers, 1854) and the gymnophallid Cercaria dichotoma Lebour, 1911 (non Müller) from the edible cockle, Cardium edule L., have been investigated by the examination of stained sections. A review is given of the principal interpretative theories which attempt to explain the nature of the reproduction and the homology of the germinal sacs of the Digenea. It is suggested that the life-cycle includes a cyclic alternation of homologous generations. Of these, the miracidium/mother-sporocyst and the daughter germinal-sac generations usually reproduce by apomictic parthenogenesis but polyembryony may also occur secondarily in some species.We are very grateful to Dr Gwendolen Rees and Professor E. W. Knight-Jones for considerable help with the manuscript.
Meiogymnophallvs minutus (Cobbold, 1859) comb, nov., from Cardium edule L. and Haematopus ostralegus occidentalis Neumann is shown to be synonymous with Lecithodendrium somateriae (non Levinsen, 1881) Jameson, 1902 in partim, Cercaria margaritae Lebour, 1907, Oymnophalloides oedemiae (Jameson & Nicoll, 1913) James, 1964, Cercaria cambrensis Cole, 1938, and Gymnophallus nereicola Rebecq & Prévot, 1962. The intensity of infestation of cockles, with the metacercariae, increases with the size and particularly with the age of this host and varies with the seasonal migrations of the final host. The connexion between the metacercaria and the adult is demonstrated experimentally. Domestic ducklings used as experimental hosts were susceptible to infection when fed with minced cockles but not when fed on baby chick crumbs.We are very grateful to Professor E. W. Knight-Jones for the provision of working facilities and for help with the manuscript and to the Science Research Council for a grant to one of us (E.A.B.) which made the work possible.
This work reviews the significant community of digenean trematodes observed infecting the edible cockle, Cerastoderma edule, and the snail Nassarius reticulatus in the channel of S. Jacinto, Ria de Aveiro Estuary, Portugal. The Digenea observed comprise 15 species, belonging to the families Bucephallidae (1), Echinostomatidae (4), Gymnophallidae (3), Lepocreadiidae (1), Microphallidae (1), Monorchiidae (1), Renicolidae (1), Strigeidae, (1), and Zoogonidae (2). The species were studied by light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. Information is included for hosts, sites of infection, prevalence, and a brief description of parasite surface morphology. The significance of these observations is compared with the presence of these digeneans from other regions, mainly the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea. The Ria de Aveiro is a geographical location conducive to extensive species co-occurrence resulting from the overlap between southern (Mediterranean) and northern definitive hosts of the parasites. Differences in life cycle strategies were observed and discussed.
The morphology and ecology are described for four sibling species of digenean metacercariae: Meiogymnophallus minutus (Cobbold 1859), M. strigatus (Lebour 1908) from the estuarine cockle Cerastoderma edule L. and M. fossarum (Bartoli, 1965) and M. rebecqui (Bartoli, 1983) comb. nov. from the brackish water lagoon cockle C. glaucum (Poiret). Although occupying different sites within the two species of cockle, both M. minutus and M. fossarum infections result in pathological effects that may cause heavy host mortality. Remarkably, they also result in an inversion of the cockles in situ in the sand such that predation by the final host species is enhanced.
The body wall of the daughter sporocyst of Cercaria bucephalopsis haimaena Lacaze-Duthiers, 1854, is shown by the electron-microscope to consist of an external syncytial tegument, lying on a basement membrane, and an internal cellular subtegument, which surrounds a body cavity containing developing cercariae.The syncytial tegument has areas of dense cytoplasm alternating with sparse reticulate cytoplasm. The dense cytoplasm contains nuclei, a few mitochondria and secretory products which probably include a neutral mucopolysaccharide. This may be the precursor of the acid mucopolysaccharide in the sparse reticulate cytoplasm and on the surface of the daughter sporocyst.Nutrients are probably absorbed through the outer plasma membrane of the tegument, pass through the sparse reticulate cytoplasm in the middle region of the tegument, the inner plasma membrane and basement membrane into the subtegument.The ultrastructure of the tegument of adult and larval Digenea are compared.We would like to thank Dr Gwendolen Rees for allowing us to examine the electron-micrographs of Parorchis acanthus. We are also grateful to Professor E. W. Knight-Jones for the provision of excellent working facilities and to the Science Research Council, for a grant to one of us (E.A.B.) which made the work possible.
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