Gynaecotyla adunca

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Gynaecotyla adunca
Scientific classification Red Pencil Icon.png
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Platyhelminthes
Class: Rhabditophora
Order: Plagiorchiida
Family: Microphallidae
Genus: Gynaecotyla
Species:
G. adunca
Binomial name
Gynaecotyla adunca
(Linton, 1905)

Gynaecotyla adunca is a fluke that normally infects birds. [1] It has also been found in 15% of a sample of the marsh rice rat (Oryzomys palustris) from a salt marsh at Cedar Key, Florida. [2] It uses fiddler crabs such as Uca rapax as its intermediate host. [3]

Related Research Articles

Lyperosomum intermedium is a parasitic trematode belonging to the subclass Digenea that infects the marsh rice rat. The species was first described in 1972 by Denton and Kinsella, who wrote that it was closest to Lyperosomum sinuosum, known from birds and raccoons in the United States and Brazil. Three years later, Denton and Kissinger placed the two, together with a number of other species, in a new subgenus of Lyperosomum, Sinuosoides. Species of Lyperosomum mainly infect birds; L. intermedium is one of the few species to infect a mammal.

Maritrema heardi is a parasitic fluke that infects the marsh rice rat in a salt marsh at Cedar Key, Florida. It was first listed as Maritrema sp. II in 1988, then described as the only species of a new genus, Floridatrema heardi, in 1994, and eventually reassigned in 2003 to Maritrema as Maritrema heardi. Its intermediate host is the fiddler crab Uca pugilator and it lives in the intestine of the marsh rice rat, its definitive host. Together with two other species of Maritrema, it is very common in affected marsh rice rats; it infects 19% of studied rats at Cedar Key. According to Tkach and colleagues, M. heardi is probably primarily a parasite of birds that has secondarily infected the marsh rice rat. Floridatrema was distinguished from Maritrema on the basis of its possession of loops of the uterus that extend forward to the place where the intestine is forked or even to the pharynx. Genetically, M. heardi may be closest to the morphologically similar M. neomi, which infects Neomys water shrews in the Carpathians.

Aonchotheca forresteri is a parasitic nematode that infects the marsh rice rat in Florida. Occurring mainly in adults, it inhabits the stomach. It is much more common during the wet season, perhaps because its unknown intermediate host is an earthworm that only emerges when it rains. The worm was discovered in 1970 and formally described in 1987. Originally classified in the genus Capillaria, it was reclassified in Aonchotheca in 1999. A. forresteri is small and narrow-bodied, with a length of 13.8 to 19.4 mm in females and 6.8 to 9.2 mm in males. Similar species such as A. putorii differ in features of the alae and spicule, the size of the female, and the texture of the eggs.

Hassalstrongylus lichtenfelsi is a nematode worm of the genus Hassalstrongylus that infects the marsh rice rat in Florida. The females cannot be distinguished from those of the other species in the marsh rice rat, H. forresteri and H. musculi.

Cladotaenia circi is a tapeworm of the genus Cladotaenia that has birds of prey as its definitive host, such as the western marsh harrier, hen harrier, and peregrine falcon in Europe. It has been found at low frequencies in small mammals, such as the bank vole and common vole in Hungary and the marsh rice rat in Florida.

Ascocotyle angrense is a fluke in the genus Ascocotyle that mainly infects birds. It has previously been confused with A. diminuta, which infects fish-eating birds and raccoons. It has also been recorded from the marsh rice rat in a saltwater marsh at Cedar Key, Florida, where it occurred in 25% of animals.

Brachylaima virginianum is a fluke of the genus Brachylaima that infects the Virginia opossum throughout its range. It has also been found in young black bears and in marsh rice rats, both from Florida., and from raccoons in Kentucky.

Fibricola lucida is a fluke that infects Virginia opossums, American minks, and marsh rice rats in North America. In a study in Florida, F. lucida was the only fluke of the marsh rice rat that occurred in both the freshwater marsh at Paynes Prairie and the saltwater marsh at Cedar Key. At the former locality, it infected 11% of rice rats and the number of worms per infected rat ranged from 1 to 65, averaging 17. At Cedar Key, 67% of rice rats were infected and the number of worms per infected rat ranged from 1 to 1975, averaging 143.

Maritrema prosthometra is a parasitic fluke from North America. It was first described in 1969 from the intestine of the clapper rail in eastern North America. Later, it was also found in the small intestine of 5% of a sample of marsh rice rats collected in a salt marsh at Cedar Key, Florida, where it used the fiddler crab Uca pugilator as an intermediate host.

Maritrema is a genus of trematodes (flukes) in the family Microphallidae, although some have suggested its placement in the separate family Maritrematidae. It was first described by Nikoll in 1907 from birds in Britain. Species of the genus usually infect birds, but several have switched hosts and are found in mammals, such as the marsh rice rat. Several species use the fiddler crab Uca pugilator as an intermediate host.

Microphallus basodactylophallus is a species of digenean parasite in the genus Microphallus. It was first described in 1969, as Carneophallus basodactylophallus, from southern Louisiana, where the raccoon is the definitive host, the first intermediate host is the snail Lyrodes parvula, and the second intermediate host is the crab Callinectes sapidus. It was later moved to the genus Microphallus. In 1988, John Kinsella recorded it from the marsh rice rat in a saltmarsh at Cedar Key, Florida. There, it was one of the most prevalent parasites in the marsh rice rat and used C. sapidus as an intermediate host.

Probolocoryphe glandulosa is a digenean parasite in the genus Probolocoryphe of family Microphallidae. Recorded hosts include the clapper rail, ruddy turnstone, raccoon, little blue heron, Wilson's plover, black-bellied plover, and marsh rice rat.

Mastophorus muris is a parasitic nematode in the genus Mastophorus. It infects animals such as the marsh rice rat, hispid cotton rat, and singing vole.

Parastrongylus schmidti is a species of parasitic nematode in the genus Parastrongylus. It was first described as Angiostrongylus schmidti in 1971 from the marsh rice rat in Florida, but later assigned to Parastrongylus.

Pterygodermatites ondatrae is a species of parasitic nematode in the genus Pterygodermatites. It has been recorded in the hispid cotton rat in Florida and Texas. In Florida, it has also been recorded on the marsh rice rat, together with an unnamed species of the same genus, the female of which cannot be distinguished from that of P. ondatrae.

Physaloptera hispida is a parasitic nematode in the genus Physaloptera. It has been found on the marsh rice rat, hispid cotton rat, Florida mouse, cotton mouse, and oldfield mouse in Florida.

Spiruridae is family of nematodes in the order Spirurida. An unidentified parasitic larval member of this family has been recorded in the marsh rice rat in a salt marsh at Cedar Key, Florida, and also in fiddler crabs (Uca) there; it is perhaps a bird parasite that does not reach maturity in the rice rat.

Trichostrongylus affinis is a species of parasitic nematode in the genus Trichostrongylus. It primarily infects cottontails (Sylvilagus), but has also been found in the hispid cotton rat and the marsh rice rat.

Trichostrongylus sigmodontis is a species of parasitic nematode in the genus Trichostrongylus. It primarily infects the hispid cotton rat, but has also been found in the marsh rice rat.

References

  1. Verberg and Hunter, 1961, p. 34
  2. Kinsella, 1988, table 1
  3. Kinsella, 1988, p. 277

Literature cited