Amphilina foliacea
Klaus RohdeIntroduction
The species is widely distributed in Europe and Asia excluding western and southwestern Europe and eastern and southern Asia. Janicki, who worked out the life cycle of the species, suggested that the original life cycle, in the evolutionary past, included a crustacean first and a fish second intermediate host as well as an extinct final host that fed on the fish, harbouring the adult parasite in its digestive tract (Fig. 9). Justification for this hypothesis is that, in other cestodes, stages infecting the body cavity of a fish host are larval forms (plerocercoids). The hypothetical original life cycle would resemble that of Diphyllobothrium latum, which uses crustaceans as first and fish as second intermediate, and fish-eating mammals as final hosts. The maximum length of specimens is 65 mm, the maximum width 30 mm.
The life cycle of this species is described on the Life Cycles page. For information about pathology see the Effects on the Host page.
Characteristics
References
Dubinina, M.N. (1982). Parasitic worms of the class Amphilinida (Platyhelminthes). "Nauka", Leningrad (in Russian). (Older references therein).
About This Page
Klaus Rohde
University of New England, Armidale, New South Wales, Australia
Correspondence regarding this page should be directed to Klaus Rohde at
Page copyright © 2000 Klaus Rohde
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- First online 06 December 2000
Citing this page:
Rohde, Klaus. 2000. Amphilina foliacea. Version 06 December 2000. http://tolweb.org/Amphilina_foliacea/20407/2000.12.06 in The Tree of Life Web Project, http://tolweb.org/