| Literature DB >> 26267862 |
Crystal Kelehear1, Hugh I Jones2, Benjamin A Wood3, Richard Shine1.
Abstract
Dissections of >1,200 wild-caught cane toads (Rhinella marina) in tropical Australia confirm a laboratory report that anurans can expel foreign objects from the coelom by incorporating them into the urinary bladder. The foreign objects that we found inside bladders included a diverse array of items (e.g., grass seeds, twigs, insect prey, parasites), many of which may have entered the coelom via rupture of the gut wall. In some cases, the urinary bladder was fused to other organs including liver, fat bodies, ovaries, Bidder's organs, lungs, mesentery, stomach wall, gall bladder, and the abdominal wall. Acanthocephalan parasites (of a range of developmental stages) were identified from the walls of the urinary bladders of three cane toads. This organ may play a significant role in destroying or excreting metazoan parasites, as well as inanimate objects.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26267862 PMCID: PMC4533966 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0134036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Gross appearance of abnormalities involving fusion of the cane toad urinary bladder with other organs.
A) Urinary bladder fused to liver, note adjacent cysts on liver tissue and dark intrusion inside the lumen of the urinary bladder. B) Urinary bladder fused to mesentery via thin string, note adjacent cysts on mesentery. C) Urinary bladder fused to Spirurid cyst on stomach wall.
Fig 2Histology of the cane toad urinary bladder walls containing acanthocephalans.
A) Cystacanth larva within the bladder wall, note spines inverted. B) Everted acanthocephalan spines embedded in inflammatory cells. Both images are focus-stacked from three photographs to maximize depth of field.