1. Unusual snail species involved in the transmission ofFasciola hepaticain watercress beds in central France
- Author
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M. Abrous, Gilles Dreyfuss, Daniel Rondelaud, and Philippe Vignoles
- Subjects
Snails ,Fresh Water ,Disease Vectors ,Lymnaeidae ,Food Parasitology ,Lymnaea ovata ,Lymnaea ,parasitic infections ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Ecology ,Paramphistomum daubneyi ,L. stagnalis ,Infectious Diseases ,Larva ,Planorbis leucostoma ,France ,Seasons ,Trematoda ,Plants, Edible ,Fascioliasis ,Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,Physa acuta ,Population ,Cattle Diseases ,Zoology ,Food Contamination ,Lymnaea stagnalis ,Planorbis ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,Host-Parasite Interactions ,Species Specificity ,Hepatica ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Fasciola hepatica ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,Fasciolosis ,watercress bed ,education ,Disease Reservoirs ,Leucostoma ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Insect Science ,Cattle ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Parasitology - Abstract
Four freshwater pulmonate species (Lymnaea ovata, L. stagnalis, Physa acuta, Planorbis leucostoma)were living in several watercress beds known for their relationships with human cases of fasciolosis, whereas L. truncatula was never found. The aims of these studies were to determine the prevalence of natural infections with Fasciola hepatica in snails and to verify if these species might ensure the full larval development of this trematode (with cercarial shedding] when they were experimentally subjected to F. hepatica only, or to co-infections with an other trematode species. Investigations were so carried out in six snail populations living in watercress beds (including three for P. acuta) and in four others originating from three brooks or a pond (as controls). Snails naturally infected with F. hepatica were found in two watercress beds inhabited by L. ovata (prevalence of infection: 1.4 %) and P. leucostoma (0.1 %), respectively. The L. ovata from the watercress bed could be infected at a higher size than those from the control population and the prevalence of this infection was greater in the bed population. Similar findings were noted for L. stagnalis. Despite single or dual infections, the results obtained with the four populations of P. acuta were unsuccessful. In contrast, the co-infections of young P. leucostoma with Paramphistomum daubneyi and F. hepatica resulted in the shedding of some F. hepatica cercariae. According to the authors, the occurrence of fasciolosis in these watercress beds would be the consequence of frequent natural encounters between parasite and snails (L. ovata, L. stagnalis), or of co-infections with P. daubneyi and F. hepatica (P. leucostoma). In watercress beds only colonized by P. acuta, a lymnaeid species would have ensured the larval development of F. hepatica but it would have been eliminated by P. acuta, as this last species was known to be invasive and could colonize open drainage ditches on siliceous soil.
- Published
- 2002