AI Article Synopsis

  • A study conducted on Nile crocodiles revealed the presence of the pentastomid Leiperia cincinnalis, with significant infection rates observed among the examined reptiles.
  • Infection stages included infective larvae, pre-adult males and females, and mature males found clustered primarily in the pulmonary artery, with some in the lungs.
  • The study also showed that eggs from infected females contained fully-developed larvae, which resulted in the death of Mozambique bream fish used for infection tests within a week.

Article Abstract

A single male and several adult females of the pentastomid Leiperia cincinnalis were recovered from the trachea of five of six Nile crocodiles examined in 1995 and 1998. Infective larvae, pre-adult males and females, as well as mature males, occurred in clusters in the pulmonary artery but infective larvae and pre-adult females were also occasionally taken from the lungs. Irrespective of the developmental stage, the intensity of infection was 3, 6, 48, 72 and 79. Sixty-four percent of eggs recovered from the posterior part of the uterus of a patent L. cincinnalis female contained fully-developed primary larvae and these were used to infect 24 Mozambique bream Oreochromis mossambicus. Within a week of infection all the fish died and hatched primary larvae were recovered from the stomach and anterior part of the intestine. Eggs that had not hatched were found to be unsegmented. The total primary larval count in seven fish was 18, 12, 1, 25, 16, >40 and >50. Descriptions with detailed measurements are given of the females, the males, the eggs, the primary larvae and the infective larvae of L. cincinnalis.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/a:1006306507207DOI Listing

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