Abstract

Fully-developed eggs of the monogenean Entobdella soleae from the skin of the common sole ( Solea solea) hatch when treated with dilute solutions of urea or ammonium chloride in sea water. There is some evidence that arginine may stimulate hatching but the eggs do not respond when treated with sea water solutions containing trimethylamine oxide or glutamine. Sole skin mucus contains sufficient urea to stimulate hatching but insufficient ammonia. Solutions of urea in sea water stimulate hatching in the monogenean parasite Acanthocotyle lobianchi found on ray skin. Sea water solutions containing ammonium chloride and trimethylamine oxide failed to hatch the eggs of A. lobianchi and the eggs were also insensitive to various amino acids made up at concentrations found in host mucus. Experiments with urease confirmed that urea in ray ventral skin mucus is the host hatching factor for A. lobianchi. Skin mucus from the common sole failed to stimulate hatching in A. lobianchi. The role as hatching factors of excretory products in host gill effluent, skin mucus and urine is discussed.

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