Publication Type: | Journal Article |
Year of Publication: | 1991 |
Authors: | S. Cohen, Greenwood, M. T., Fowler, J. A. |
Journal: | Medical and Veterinary Entomology |
Volume: | 5 |
Pagination: | 101 - 110 |
Date Published: | 1991 |
Keywords: | anserinum, Filarial, host, Sarconema, Swans, Trinoton, vector |
Abstract: | The role of the louse Trinoton anserinum (F) as an intermediate host of Sarconema eurycerca (Wehr) was investigated in swans. 8.3% of healthy swans carried one to twelve lice per bird, dispersed contagiously. Injured and lead-poisoned swans were more heavily infected. The mouthparts appear designed to penetrate the hosts' skin; the mandibles are robust and asymmetric, and the maxillae have a serrated intercutting surface. 22% fed exclusively on blood and 33% on both blood and feather. All life-cycle stages fed upon blood and the barbs and barbules from down feathers; hooklets from contour feathers were only found in adults. 9% of lice were infected with developing nematode larvae in the head, thorax or abdomen. Lice labelled with Technetium 99 m moved towards the scapulas and the wings. Lice were found to be highly active and were mobile. |
URL: | http://www.phthiraptera.info/sites/phthiraptera.info/files/0303.pdf |
The louse Trinoton anserinum (Amblycera, Phthiraptera), an intermediate host of Sarconema eurycerca (Filarioidea, Nematoda), a heartworm of swans
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