| Literature DB >> 7928064 |
Abstract
Echinostoma trivolvis eggs developed to mature miracidia in both dark and light culture conditions as early as 7 days. Hatching initially occurred in eggs exposed to incandescent light on day 11. Those exposed to fluorescent light first hatched on day 13. Maximum hatching (50+ miracidia/day) lasted only over a 3-day span with the entire hatching period being at the most 5 days. Eggs stored in complete darkness for 21 days developed to mature miracidia in 9 days, and, when exposed to light, gave a 50+ hatch the next day. Those eggs stored for 28 and 35 days developed normally but never hatched upon exposure to light. Miracidia hatched at all times of the day without a circadian pattern. Miracidia that hatched from these trials exhibited a definite negative geotaxis in a four-tube vertical system. This response was either negated in open tubes or dominated by a positive phototaxis in the open-bottomed tubes. In horizontal chambers without the depth component, a strong positive phototaxis was also demonstrated. Miracidia showed a positive klinokinetic response, as determined in phi-chambers, to acidic compounds such as aspartic, glutamic, hydrochloric, sulfuric, and acetic acids. Snail-conditioned water prepared from Helisoma trivolvis snails also elicited a positive response. The neutral amino acid, leucine, and possible snail excretion products, Mg2+ and ammonia, did not stimulate these echinostroma miracidia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1994 PMID: 7928064 DOI: 10.1016/0020-7519(94)90115-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Parasitol ISSN: 0020-7519 Impact factor: 3.981