Abstract
Hybridization experiments between Haemonchus contortus from sheep and H. placei from cattle indicate that the H. placei vulvar morph type and the inability of the eggs to hatch and develop at 11°C were inherited as dominant traits in the hybrids. The size of the third stage larvae was similar to H. placei in hybrids from the mating of male H. placei × female H. contortus while larvae from the reciprocal mating were intermediate in size. Hybrids produced by the mating of thiabendazole resistant female H. contortus × non-resistant male H. placei were also resistant. The F 1 males of the mating between male H. contortus and female H. placei were sterile. Male sterility did not occur in the reciprocal cross until the F 2 generation. Female hybrids from these generations had a low level of fertility when backcrossed to males of either parent species. Cytological studies of the hybrid males indicated that sterility was due to several kinds of meiotic disturbance and that spermatogenesis stopped during metaphase I. The chromosomes in eggs of unfertilized females did not undergo meiosis and polar body formation; instead they increased in number by a process of endomitosis. Unfertilized eggs in the faeces were characterized by uneven cytoplasmic division and abnormal shape. It is proposed that hybrid sterility can lead to the local eradication of one species of Haemonchus by the other. Furthermore, the outcome of which species is eradicated can be influenced by such variables as initial population sizes, climate, and the local ratio of sheep to cattle.
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