Difference between revisions of "Dicrocoelium dendriticum"
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== ''Dicrocoelium dendriticum'' == | == ''Dicrocoelium dendriticum'' == | ||
[[Image:Dicrocoelium dendriticum.jpg|thumb|right|150px|''Dicrocoelium dendriticum'' - Joaquim Castellà Veterinary Parasitology Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona]] | [[Image:Dicrocoelium dendriticum.jpg|thumb|right|150px|''Dicrocoelium dendriticum'' - Joaquim Castellà Veterinary Parasitology Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona]] | ||
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[[Category:Trematodes]] | [[Category:Trematodes]] | ||
− | [[Category:To_Do_- | + | [[Category:To_Do_-_Max]] |
Revision as of 20:25, 15 July 2010
Dicrocoelium dendriticum
- This is a small fluke (<1.5cm) found in the bile ducts of ruminants and some other herbivores
- The flukes migrate directly up the common bile duct to reach the bile ducts within the liver
- They are therefore much less pathogenic than Fasciola (which burrow through the liver parenchyma)
- Dicrocoelium is rare in Britain, occurring mainly in the Hebrides, but is common in Europe
- Small dark-brown eggs are shed in faeces
- These contain a miracidium
- If ingested by a land snail, the flukes develop, forming cercariae
- These are excreted by the snails in slime-balls, which are collected and eaten by wood-ants
- Metacercariae form inside the ants
- The final host is infected when ants are eaten at grazing
- The presence of metacercariae in the nerve ganglia of the ants makes them revert to a primitive behaviour pattern, whereby they cling onto herbage overnight instead of retreating to the nest enhancing the likelihood of being eaten by grazing animals