1961
DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-7998.1961.tb06081.x
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The Oxyurid Parasites (Nematoda) of Primates

Abstract: Enterobius nycticebi Baylis, 1928 and E. callithricis Solomon, 1933 are briefly redescribed and the oxyurid parasites of primates are discussed, additional morphological evidence being presented on many of them when necessary. The parasites are regrouped into two genera, with two subgenera each, thus: Enterobius Leach, 1853 with Enterobius and Protenterobius subgen. nov. (type species E. nycticebi); Trypanoxyuris Vevers, 1923 with Trypanoxyuris and Paraoxyuronema Artigas, 1937. A trend from a three‐lipped mout… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…In comparison with Sandosham (1950) description, males differ in the spicule length (0.1225 vs. 0.052 mm). For this reason, E. foecundus is not considered conspecific with E. buckleyi, but we support the opinion of Inglis (1961) "that E. simiae was rightly treated by Sandosham (1950) as nomen inquirendum, it is better to treat it and probably E. foecundus also, as nomina dubia".…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 49%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In comparison with Sandosham (1950) description, males differ in the spicule length (0.1225 vs. 0.052 mm). For this reason, E. foecundus is not considered conspecific with E. buckleyi, but we support the opinion of Inglis (1961) "that E. simiae was rightly treated by Sandosham (1950) as nomen inquirendum, it is better to treat it and probably E. foecundus also, as nomina dubia".…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 49%
“…The oesophagus in the subgenus has distinct isthmus, lateral alae with double crest and vulva is closed by brown cement in the gravid females. These characters coincide well with subgenus Protenterobius by Inglis (1961) and Inglis & Dunn 1963). The type species of this subgenus is L. (Protenterobius) nycticebi (Baylis, 1928), parasitizing Nycticebus coucang (Boddaert) in Malaya and Borneo (Baylis 1928;Inglis 1961;Inglis & Dunn 1963;Hugot 1999).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…The first documented report concerning orangutan parasites was by Blanchard (), who described Bertiella satyri from orangutans. An additional three reports are followed in 1921 and 1930 (Lubimov, ; McCallum, ; Vogel & Vogelsang, ), latter added upon by several other studies based mainly on adult parasites recovered from individuals that died in zoos (Inglis, ; Joskoski, ; Moore, ; Sandosham, ) (see Table ). The first report based on coprology analysis comes from the Yerkes Regional Research Centre, Emory University, Atlanta.…”
Section: Gastrointestinal Parasites Of Orangutansmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Enterobius nematodes are Oxyuridae that are found in humans and primates and have anthropozoonotic importance (DILRUKSDHI et al, 2006). Species of Strongyloides and Enterobius in non-human primates, including the human parasites Enterobius vermicularis, Strongyloides stercoralis and S. fuelleborni have been described by Inglis (1961), Yamaschita (1963, Collet et al (1986) and Monteiro et al (2003).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%