Literature DB >> 7729975

Evolutionary patterns in life histories of Oxyurida.

M Adamson1.   

Abstract

The Oxyurida comprises some 850 known species that occur in the intestine of arthropods and vertebrates (one species in annelids). Important arthropod hosts include Diplopoda, Blattodea, Gryllotalpoidea, Passalidae, Scarabaeida and Hydrophilidae. The major vertebrate hosts are lizards, tortoises, primates, rodents and lagomorphs. An underlying characteristic of the group is haplodiploid reproduction and like many haplodiploid groups, pinworms tend to have life histories that involve high levels of inbreeding. Unlike Strongylida, Ascaridida and Spirurida, which have diversified in tissue site and life cycle as well as hosts, pinworms show little variation in these features and have radiated only across host groups. Two explanations are advanced for this. Haplodiploidy and its concomitant inbreeding may act to canalise evolutionary change, although diverse groups such as the Hymenoptera belie this. Alternatively, Strongylida, Ascaridida and Spirurida are presumed to have arisen from skin-penetrating ancestors that were forced to undergo a tissue migration before reaching their primitive tissue site, the gut. This migration demanded they adapt to a variety of tissue sites and thus acted as a preadaptation to further diversification. The Oxyurida, in contrast, probably arose using oral contaminative transmission. The lack of exposure to other tissue sites may therefore have relegated pinworms to their position in the posterior gut.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7729975     DOI: 10.1016/0020-7519(94)90189-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Parasitol        ISSN: 0020-7519            Impact factor:   3.981


  8 in total

1.  Coronostoma claireae n. sp. (Nematoda: Rhabditida: Oxyuridomorpha: Coronostomatidae) from the Indigenous Milliped Narceus gordanus (Chamberlain, 1943) (Diplopoda: Spirobolida) in Ocala National Forest, Florida.

Authors:  Gary Phillips; Ernest C Bernard; Robert J Pivar; John K Moulton; Rowland M Shelley
Journal:  J Nematol       Date:  2016-09       Impact factor: 1.402

2.  Epidemiology and biology of nematodofauna affecting Testudo hermanni, Testudo graeca and Testudo marginata in Italy.

Authors:  Donato Traversa; Gioia Capelli; Raffaella Iorio; Salah Bouamer; Angelo Cameli; Annunziata Giangaspero
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  2005-10-20       Impact factor: 2.289

3.  The helminth community component species of the wood mouse as biological tags of a ten post-fire-year regeneration process in a Mediterranean ecosystem.

Authors:  Sandra Sáez-Durán; Ángela L Debenedetti; Sandra Sainz-Elipe; M Teresa Galán-Puchades; Màrius V Fuentes
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  2018-05-10       Impact factor: 2.289

4.  Discovery of a 240 million year old nematode parasite egg in a cynodont coprolite sheds light on the early origin of pinworms in vertebrates.

Authors:  Jean-Pierre Hugot; Scott L Gardner; Victor Borba; Priscilla Araujo; Daniela Leles; Átila Augusto Stock Da-Rosa; Juliana Dutra; Luiz Fernando Ferreira; Adauto Araújo
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2014-11-13       Impact factor: 3.876

5.  Composition of the Cockroach Gut Microbiome in the Presence of Parasitic Nematodes.

Authors:  Cláudia S L Vicente; Sota Ozawa; Koichi Hasegawa
Journal:  Microbes Environ       Date:  2016-08-11       Impact factor: 2.912

6.  Broad infectivity of Leidynema appendiculatum (Nematoda: Oxyurida: Thelastomatidae) parasite of the smokybrown cockroach Periplaneta fuliginosa (Blattodea: Blattidae).

Authors:  Sota Ozawa; Koichi Hasegawa
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2018-03-23       Impact factor: 2.912

7.  Symbiosis of the millipede parasitic nematodes Rhigonematoidea and Thelastomatoidea with evolutionary different origins.

Authors:  Seiya Nagae; Kazuki Sato; Tsutomu Tanabe; Koichi Hasegawa
Journal:  BMC Ecol Evol       Date:  2021-06-12

8.  Parasitic nematodes of the genus Syphacia Seurat, 1916 infecting Cricetidae in the British Isles: the enigmatic status of Syphacia nigeriana.

Authors:  Jerzy M Behnke; Alex Stewart; Lesley Smales; Gemma Cooper; Ann Lowe; John M Kinsella; Anna Bajer; Dorota Dwużnik-Szarek; Jeremy Herman; Jonathan Fenn; Stefano Catalano; Christophe A Diagne; Joanne P Webster
Journal:  Parasitology       Date:  2021-10-05       Impact factor: 3.234

  8 in total

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