Difference between revisions of "Stephanofilaria stilesi"
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| + | =Stephanofilaira stilesi= | ||
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{{Taxobox | {{Taxobox | ||
|name =''Stephanofilaira stilesi | |name =''Stephanofilaira stilesi | ||
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==Hosts== | ==Hosts== | ||
| − | '''Intermediate hosts''': The horn fly | + | '''Intermediate hosts''': The horn fly e.g [[Haematobia irritans]] |
| − | '''Definitive hosts''': Cattle | + | '''Definitive hosts''': Cattle. |
==Identification== | ==Identification== | ||
| − | These small [[Nematodes|nematodes]] are between 3-6mm in length. The eggs have thin shells, and are around 65μm in length. The microfilaria are 50μm long and enclosed in a spherical, vitelline membrane. | + | These small [[Nematodes|nematodes]] are between 3-6mm in length. The eggs have thin shells, and are around 65μm in length. The microfilaria are 50μm long and enclosed in a spherical, vitelline membrane. |
==Lifecycle== | ==Lifecycle== | ||
Horn flies feed on lesions found on the host skin, and ingest microfilariae, as they feed on cutaneous lesions. They later develop into L3 in around 18-21 days. The definitive host is infected when the fly leaves the L3 on the host. | Horn flies feed on lesions found on the host skin, and ingest microfilariae, as they feed on cutaneous lesions. They later develop into L3 in around 18-21 days. The definitive host is infected when the fly leaves the L3 on the host. | ||
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[[Category:Filarioidea]] | [[Category:Filarioidea]] | ||
| + | [[Category:To_Do_-_Max]] | ||
Revision as of 11:44, 31 July 2010
| This article is still under construction. |
Stephanofilaira stilesi
| Stephanofilaira stilesi | |
|---|---|
| Class | Nematoda |
| Super-family | Filarioidea |
Hosts
Intermediate hosts: The horn fly e.g Haematobia irritans
Definitive hosts: Cattle.
Identification
These small nematodes are between 3-6mm in length. The eggs have thin shells, and are around 65μm in length. The microfilaria are 50μm long and enclosed in a spherical, vitelline membrane.
Lifecycle
Horn flies feed on lesions found on the host skin, and ingest microfilariae, as they feed on cutaneous lesions. They later develop into L3 in around 18-21 days. The definitive host is infected when the fly leaves the L3 on the host.