Abstract
Survival of Hymenolepis diminuta eggs (as measured by their infectivity to the intermediate host) was found to be age-dependent with an expected value of 11 days when the eggs were retained within the faecal pellet at 10 degree C. The expected life-span of eggs under experimental conditions (i.e. extracted from faecal material and placed on filter paper at 30 degree C) was estimated as 33 min. The mean parasite burden of populations of Tribolium exposed to known densities of H. diminuta eggs was found to rise to a plateau with increasing exposure time. The experimental results provided a method of estimating the instantaneous rate of parasite transmission: a value of 0.0004/egg/min/host/13 cm2 was obtained. The mean parasite burden of populations of T. confusum exposed to known densities of H. diminuta eggs was found to decrease exponentially with increasing host density. A second estimate of the instantaneous rate of parasite transmission of 0.004/egg/min/host/13 cm2 was obtained from the experimental results. No differences in susceptibility to infection between 2-week-old male and female beetles were found. A marked decrease, however, was apparent with increasing beetle age up to 14 weeks post-eclosion.
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