The Journal of parasitology | 2021

Evidence of a Putative Novel Species of Avian Schistosome Infecting Planorbella trivolvis.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Freshwater gastropods of the genera Lymnaea Lamarck, 1799, Physa Draparnaud, 1801, Gyraulus Charpentier, 1837, Radix Montfort, 1810, and Stagnicola Jeffreys, 1830 are considered suitable intermediate hosts for avian schistosomes. A large trematode biodiversity survey performed across 3 yr on 6 lakes in Alberta confirmed 3 already-reported snail hosts for 7 North American avian schistosomes; however, the cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (COI) nucleotide sequence from 1 cercarial sample (from a single specimen of Planorbella trivolvis) was distinct from all other COI schistosome sequences. As part of a simultaneous, comparable study of P. trivolvis by us in Michigan, we collected another cercarial type from 6 lakes that was 99% similar (COI) to the aforementioned cercarial type. Phylogenetic analyses of the COI and 28S rDNA genes recovered the former cercaria in a clade of avian schistosomes. In Michigan, the feces of a Canada goose (Branta canadensis Linnaeus, 1758) had a miracidium with an identical COI nucleotide sequence. Preliminary swimmer s itch and cercarial emergence studies were performed to determine if the cercariae could cause swimmer s itch and to study the emergence pattern as compared with species of Trichobilharzia Skrjabin and Zakharow, 1920.

Volume 107 1
Pages \n 89-97\n
DOI 10.1645/20-74
Language English
Journal The Journal of parasitology

Full Text