“…The ultrastructure of the epidermis and its sensory re- ceptors has also been focused in Trematoda, special attention beeing paid to the function of the epidermis in the finding of a host and in the adaptation of the parasites to the final host. Sensory structures have been observed in Digenea by Dixon & Mercer (1965), Morris & Threadgold (1967), Silk & Spence (1969), Chapman & Wilson (1970), Erasmus (1970), Robson & Erasmus (1970), Storch (1970), Wilson (1970), Matricon-Condran (1971), Morris (1971), Nuttman (1971), Bogitsch (1972) Kerie (1973), Nollen & Nadakavukaren (1974), and Ebrahimzadeh (1974), and in Monogenea by Halton & Morris (1969), Lyons (1969~1, 1969bLyons (1969~1, , 1972Lyons (1969~1, , 1973, and Rohde (1972). Some observations have been made on the sensory receptors of Aspidobothria (Rohde, 1966;Halton & Lyness, 1971), and of Cestoda (Morseth, 1966(Morseth, , 1967Sakamoto & Sugimura, 1969;Featherston, 1972;Blitz & Smyth, 1973).…”