AI Article Synopsis

  • The larvae of Discocotyle sagittata show varying survival and swimming activity based on their age and the water temperature, with longer life spans at cooler temperatures.
  • As they age, the larvae become less active, spending less time swimming in the water.
  • D. sagittata larvae can infect hosts shortly after they emerge, feeding on blood within just 2 hours, which suggests that temperature may influence the timing of parasite transmission throughout different seasons.

Article Abstract

The survival characteristics of Discocotyle sagittata larvae are both age- and temperature-dependent. In laboratory studies at constant temperatures of 6, 10, 13, 18 and 22 degrees C, oncomiracidia had a maximum life-span of 96 h at 6 degrees C, declining with increasing temperature to 26 h at 22 degrees C. Larval swimming activity was also age dependent, and continued for a large proportion of survival time. The relationship between time at which larvae stop swimming as a proportion of total survival time was statistically significant between temperatures. Proportionally, oncomiracidia swam for longer periods at lower temperatures. As oncomiracidia age, they become progressively less active, spending less time in the water column. In contrast to observations recorded in the literature, D. sagittata larvae are infective soon after emergence (within the minimum of 2 h studied), and feed on blood from the gill capillaries within 2 h post-exposure. The temperature-dependent characteristics of the larval stage are likely to have important implications for seasonal changes in parasite transmission.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0031182098003217DOI Listing

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