1994
DOI: 10.1017/s0022149x00013493
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Fasciola hepatica: the infection rate and the development of redial generations in Lymnaea truncatula exposed to miracidia after experimental desiccation and activation in water

Abstract: Adult Lymnaea truncatula were subjected to 10 days of experimental desiccation and then remained in water for 1 or 8 days before each was exposed to a single miracidium. The infection rate was lower in these snails than in infected controls that were not exposed to stress (52–54% vs 73%). The redial burden clearly decreased in stressed snails (18–25 rediae per snail) than in controls (43 rediae). This numerical decrease concerned essentially: i) live independent rediae of the first generation and the first coh… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Large mother redia packed with developing daughter rediae. Similar observations of asynchronous development of rediae by the related fasciolid parasites (Rakondravao et al, 1992;Rondelaud, 1994) are also suggestive of a degree of specialization. Scale bar = 200llm.…”
Section: Echinostome Life Cyclesupporting
confidence: 62%
“…Large mother redia packed with developing daughter rediae. Similar observations of asynchronous development of rediae by the related fasciolid parasites (Rakondravao et al, 1992;Rondelaud, 1994) are also suggestive of a degree of specialization. Scale bar = 200llm.…”
Section: Echinostome Life Cyclesupporting
confidence: 62%
“…However, for some factors, variations in the numbers of free and live rediae were noted. Drought of the snail habitat for 35 days (Rondelaud, 1994), as well as seven biotic factors, have the effect of limiting redial numbers in the three generations. Among the biotic factors, the most important are the species of the definitive host from which eggs of F. hepatica are collected for snail infections (miracidia originating from eggs collected from cattle, sheep or nutria had a greater infectivity than those coming from lagomorphs: Rondelaud & Dreyfuss, 1995; Vignoles et al , 2004), the susceptibility or the resistance of adult flukes to triclabendazole (Walker et al , 2006), and the frequency of encounters between snails and the parasite in the field (Rondelaud, 1993).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…truncatula did not support easily the effects of aestivation (Rondelaud and Morel-Vareille, 1975;Rondelaud, 1994) and, under such conditions, other potential vectors could play an important role in parasite transmission. In Belgium where the three species are present the respective role of each of them remained to be determined although G. truncatula is the main intermediate host.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 83%