Schistosoma mansoni is a heteroxenous parasite, meaning that during its life cycle needs the participation of obligatory intermediate and definitive hosts. The larval development occurs in aquatic molluscs belonging to the Biomphalaria genus, leading to the formation of cercariae, which emerge to infect the final vertebrate host. For this reason, studies for control of the diseases caused by digenetic trematodes often focus on combating the snail hosts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Trop
June 2022
Heterorhabditis bacteriophora is an entomopathogenic nematode (EPN) that is mutually associated with Photorhabdus luminescens, utilized globally for biological control of numerous organisms. Freshwater snails of the species Biomphalaria glabrata have been incriminated as the main intermediate hosts of Schistosoma mansoni in Brazil, but virtually nothing is known about the susceptibility of these gastropod to EPNs. Information in this respect is relevant for control of these intermediate hosts, and thus of the helminthiases they transmit.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF