Studies on parasitic castration: Soft tissue and shell weights of Ilyanassa obsoleta (Mollusca) parasitized by larval trematodes

The shell lengths, dried shell weights, soft tissue wet weights, and soft tissue dry weights were ascertained for noninfected Ilyanassa obsoleta and for the same snail species naturally infected with the following digeneans: Himasthla quissetensis, Zoogonus lasius, Cercaria dipterocerca, Lepocreadiu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of invertebrate pathology 1983-01, Vol.42 (2), p.143-150
Hauptverfasser: Cheng, Thomas C., Sullivan, John T., Howland, Keith H., Jones, Thomas F., Moran, H.Jane
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The shell lengths, dried shell weights, soft tissue wet weights, and soft tissue dry weights were ascertained for noninfected Ilyanassa obsoleta and for the same snail species naturally infected with the following digeneans: Himasthla quissetensis, Zoogonus lasius, Cercaria dipterocerca, Lepocreadium setiferoides, Microphalloides nassicola, Stephanostomum tenue, and Microbilharzia variglandis. Analyses of the data obtained indicate that infection with all of the trematodes listed above causes neither enhanced growth of soft tissues nor accelerated lengthening of the shell. However, snails infected with sporocysts of Z. lasius have significantly heavier shells than do noninfected snails. These data suggest that infection with Z. lasius may have caused enhanced growth in the form of increased calcium deposition in the shell of I. obsoleta, possibly as a result of parasitic castration. In addition, the mean dry weight of the soft tissues of snails infected with M. variglandis, when normalized for shell length, is significantly lower than that of noninfected snails, possibly as a result of parasite-induced pathology. Finally, comparisons among infected snails indicate a trend toward increased soft tissue dry weight in snails infected with L. setiferoides, although the mean dry weight of these snails does not differ significantly from the mean dry weight of noninfected snails.
ISSN:0022-2011
1096-0805
DOI:10.1016/0022-2011(83)90055-1