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On the Larval Migration of Syngamus trachea and its causal relationship to Pneumonia in young birds

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 November 2009

Phyllis A. Clapham
Affiliation:
Research Assistant, Institute of Agricultural Parasitology, St. Albans.

Extract

Larvae of Syngamus trachea pass from the intestine to the lungs of the definitive host via the blood stream. They have been recovered from blood taken from the auricles of the heart and from the posterior vena cava.

The condition of the lungs heavily infected with larvae is described.

A condition of ‘Syngamus pneumonia’ occurs in the wild state among poults of partridges and pheasants.

Type
Research Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1939

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References

Megnin, P., 1883. “On the Gapes Disease of gallinaceous birds, etc.” Pp. 122, London.Google Scholar
Ortlepp, R. J., 1923. “The life-history of Syngamus trachealis (Montagu) V Siebold, the Gape-worm of chickens.J. Helminth., 1 (3), 119140. (W.L. 11224b.)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walker, H. D., 1886. “The gape Worm of Fowls (Syngamus trachealis), the earthworm (Lumbricus terrestris), its original host, etc.Bull. Buffalo Soc. nat. Sci., V (2), 251265. (W.L. 3934.)Google Scholar