Hostname: page-component-7bb8b95d7b-l4ctd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-09-20T14:04:45.188Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Helminths from the Alimentary Canal of Farm Mink in Britain

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2009

H. S. McTaggart
Affiliation:
Department of Medicine, Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, University of Edinburgh

Extract

1. The gastro-intestinal tracts of 200 mink from 42 farms were examined for helminth parasites.

2. No parasites were found in the stomach but two species of fish-borne parasite were found in the intestine.

3. Evidence of infestation with the heterophyid trematode Cryptocotyle lingua was found in twelve mink, the largest number of flukes recovered from any one mink being seven.

4. Single immature specimens of the acanthocephalid Corynosonta hadweni were recovered from four mink, but it is considered that these were not instances of true parasitism.

5. It is concluded that helminth parasites do not constitute an important hazard on mink farms in Britain;

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1960

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Africa, C. M., 1929.—“On two German Heterophyidae with notes on the variability of certain structures”. Zbl. Bakt., Abt. I., Orig., 114, 81–6 (W.L. 23684).Google Scholar
Baylis, H. A., 1939.—“Further records of parasitic worms from British vertebrates”. Ann. Mag. nat. Hist., Ser. 11, 4, 473498. (W.L. 1050).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brandt, A. J., 1934.—“Pelsdyrsykdommer i Norge.” 4. Nord. Vet.-mölet. Helsingfors, 1933. p. 947–80.Google Scholar
Cameron, T. W. M., 1945.—“Fish-carried parasites in Canada”. Canad.J. comb. Med., 9, 245–54, 283–86, and 302–11. (W.L. 5897b).Google ScholarPubMed
Cameron, T. W. M., Parnell, I. W. and Lyster, L. I., 1940.—“The helminth parasites of sledge-dogs in Northern Canada and Newfoundland”. Canad. T Res., Sect. D. 18, 325332. (W.L. 5898c).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chaddock, T. T., 1947.—“Ten-year autopsy study of mink”. Vet. Med. 42 409 (W.L. 22520).Google Scholar
Christensen, N. O., Olsen, Sr. J. and Roth, H., 1946.—“Incidence of lungworms and gastro-intestinal parasites in Copenhagen cats.J. Parasit 32,514. (W.L. 11428).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christensen, N. O., AND Roth, H., 1949.—“Investigations on Internal parasites of dogs”. Roy. vet. agric. Coll. Copenh. Yearb. 1949, 173. (W.L. 11865).Google Scholar
Christensen, N. O. and Roth, H., 1949.—“Investigations on Internal parasites of dogs”. Roy. vet. agric. Coll. Copenh. Yearb. 1949, 173. (W.L. 11865).Google Scholar
Dawes, B., 1946.—The Trematoda, with special reference to British and other European forms. Cambridge Univ. Press.Google Scholar
De Rivas, D., 1928.—“An efficient and rapid method of concentration for the detection of ova and cysts of intestinal parasites”. Amer. J. trop. Med.,. 8, 6372. (W.L. 626).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fahmy, M. A. M., 1954.—“On some helminth parasites of the otter, Lutra lulra”. J. Helminth. 28, 189204. (W.L. 11224c).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grini, O., 1931.—“Sykdomer hos mink”. Norsk, vet Tidskr. 43, 322 and 167171. (W.L. 15215).Google Scholar
Head, K. W., 1959.—Personal Communication.Google Scholar
Jennings, A. R. and Soulsby, E. J. L., 1957.—“Diseases of Wild Birds, Fourth Report”. Bird Study, 4, 216220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johri, L. N. and Smyth, J. D., 1956.—“A histochemical approach to the study of helminth morphology”. Parasitology 46, 107116. (W.L. 16035).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kainer, R. A., 1954.—“The gross anatomy of the digestive system of the mink. I. The headgut and the foregut. II. The midgut and the hindgut. Amer. J. vet. Res., 15, 8290 and 9197. (W.L. 628a).Google Scholar
Koffman, M., 1939.—“Bidrag till kännedomen on parasiter hos husdjur och vilt i Sverige”. Skand. VetTidskr., 29, 509585. (W.L. 20216).Google Scholar
Lewis, E. A., 1926.—“Helminths of wild birds found in the Aberystwyth area.J. Helminth. 4, 712. (W.L. 11224c).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Linstow, O. von, 1905.—“Helminthen der Russischen Polar-Expedition, 1900–1903”. Mém. Acad. Sci. St.-Pétersb. (Sci. math., phys., nat.)., 18, 17 pp. (W.L. 23241).Google Scholar
Linton, E., 1940.—“Trematodes from fishes mainly from the Woods Hole region, Massachusetts.Proc. U.S. nat. Mus., 88,1172. (W.L. 16944).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mcintosh, W. C., 1927.—“Additions to the marine fauna of St. Andrews since 1874. Parasitic worms in the St. Andrews fauna”. Ann. Mag. nat. Hist. Ser. 9, 19, 4994. (W.L. 1050).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mctaggart, H. S., 1958.—“Cryplocotyle lingua in British mink”. Nature, Lond. 181, 651. (Corresp.). (W.L. 14900).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nicholl, W., 1907.—“Observations on the trematode parasites of British birds”. Ann. Mag. nat. Hist. Ser. 7. 20, 245271. (W.L. 1050).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ransom, B. H., 1920.—“Synopsis of the trematode family Heterophyidae, with descriptions of a new genus and five new species”. Proc. U.S. nat. Mus. 57, 527573. (W.L. 16944).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rothschild, M. and Clay, T., 1952.—Fleas, Flukes and Cuckoos. London: Collins.Google Scholar
Schoop, G. and Dedie, K., 1936.—“Der Darmsaugwurm Tocotrema lingua bei deutschen Silberfiichsen”. Dtsch. tierärztl. Wschr. 44, 579–81. (W.L. 7323).Google Scholar
Sealander, J. A., 1943.—“Notes on some parasites of the mink in southern Michigan”. J. Parasit., 29, 361–2. (W.L. 11428).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sprehn, C., 1956.—“Seltene Helminthen in deutschen Farmnerzen”. Disch. tierärztl. Wschr., 63, 342–6. (W.L. 7323).Google Scholar
Van Cleave, H. J., 1953a.—“A preliminary analysis of the acanthocephalan genus Corynosoma in mammals of North America”. J. Parasit., 39,113. (W.L. 11428).CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Van Cleave, H. J. 1953b.—“Acanthocephala of North American mammals”. Illinois biol. Monogr., 23, 1179.(W.L. 11428).Google Scholar
Wigdor, M. 1919.—“A new fluke from the dog”. J. Amer. vet. med. ASS., 54, 254–7. (W.L. 11022).Google Scholar