Abstract

The establishment and distribution of Echinoparyphium recurvatum metacercariae in the second intermediate host, Lymnaea peregra, were investigated at a temperature range of 5-29 degrees C. Preliminary studies on the survival and infectivity of E. recurvatum cercariae showed that both parameters were temperature dependent. No cercarial transmission occurred at 5 or 10 degrees C. Nevertheless, the transmission efficiency (1/H0) indicated that transmission was temperature independent in the temperature range 17-25 degrees C and was much lower than in previous studies using this host-parasite system. These differences were attributed to low cercarial densities used in this study. The effect of temperature on encystment site choice (mantle cavity, kidney, pericardium) by metacercariae showed that the mantle cavity was the prime site of encystment, followed by the pericardium and the kidney. Temperatures at the lower and upper ranges (14 and 29 degrees C), however, caused a significant reduction in encystment in the mantle cavity but not in the pericardium or kidney. The importance of cercarial densities, the physiological mechanisms influencing metacercarial distribution and their implications for parasite transmission to the definitive host are discussed.

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