Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Tegumental ultrastructure of the juvenile and adult Himasthla alincia (Digenea: Echinostomatidae)
The Korean Journal of Parasitology ; : 17-25, 2003.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-117986
ABSTRACT
The tegumental ultrastructure of juvenile and adult Himasthla alincia (Digenea Echinostomatidae) was observed by scanning electron microscopy. One-, 5- (juveniles) and 20-day-old worms (adults) were harvested from chicks experimentally fed metacercariae from a bivalve, Mactra veneriformis. The juvenile worms were elongated and curved ventrally. The head crown bore 31 collar spines, arranged in a single row. The lip of the oral sucker had 12 paired, and 3 single type I sensory papillae, and the ventral sucker had about 25 type II sensory papillae. The anterolateral surface between the two suckers was densely packed with tegumental spines with 4-7 pointed tips. The adult worms were more elongated and filamentous, and had severe transverse folds over the whole body surface. On the head crown and two suckers, type I and II sensory papillae were more densely distributed than in the juvenile worms. Retractile brush-like spines, with 8-10 digits, were seen on the anterolateral surface, whereas claw-shaped spines, with 2-5 digits, were sparsely distributed posteriorly to the ventral sucker. The cirrus characteristically protruded out, and was armed with small spines distally. The surface ultrastructure of H. alincia was shown to be unique among echinostomes, especially in the digitation of its tegumental spines, the distribution of sensory papillae and by severe folds of the tegument.
Subject(s)
Full text: Available Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Main subject: Sense Organs / Trematoda / Aging / Integumentary System Limits: Animals Language: English Journal: The Korean Journal of Parasitology Year: 2003 Type: Article

Similar

MEDLINE

...
LILACS

LIS

Full text: Available Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Main subject: Sense Organs / Trematoda / Aging / Integumentary System Limits: Animals Language: English Journal: The Korean Journal of Parasitology Year: 2003 Type: Article