Abstract

Of 334 mussel specimens representing 13 species, 143 individuals of seven species were found infected with Aspidogaster conchicola; encapsulation of worms was seen in six molluscan species. Encapsulated worms were most abundant anterior to the pericardium and were surrounded by inner fibroblastic and outer fibrocytic/fibrous walls, with occasional adjoining compressed host connective tissues. The inner wall contained acid mucins and phospholipids, while the outer wall contained reticulum fibers, neutral mucins, and phospholipids. Capsule structure was compared to the molluscan encapsulation classification system of T. C. Cheng and E. Rifkin (1970, Amer. Fish. Soc. Spec. Pub., No. 5, pp. 443–496) and to G. B. Pauley and C. D. Becker's (1968, J. Parasitol., 54, 917–920) account of A. conchicola encapsulation. Capsule contents included living or moribund adult worms, viable eggs or empty egg shells produced by disintegrated worms, juveniles hatched from eggs deposited by encapsulated adults, and host cells of which “brown cells” were most abundant. Because of the high frequency of encapsulated moribund worms observed in this study (more than 60%), we infer that this host reaction probably contributed to the parasite's death. Worm eggs individually encapsulated by hemocytes in hemal spaces also were observed. Life cycle implications of juvenile A. conchicola within digestive gland diverticula are discussed.

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