Issue |
Ann. Parasitol. Hum. Comp.
Volume 46, Number 5, 1971
|
|
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Page(s) | 589 - 593 | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/parasite/1971465589 | |
Published online | 11 October 2017 |
Mémoire
Présence du cysticercoïde d'Hymenolepis brusatac Vaucher, 1971 chez Phlebotomus perniciosus Newstead, 1911 et Phlebotomus mascittii Grassi, 1908
Laboratoire de Zoologie (Vers) associé au C.N.R.S. (P r A.-G. CHABAUD), Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, 57, rue Cuvier, F. 75 - Paris, 5 e, France, Département de Biologie animale, Centre universitaire, F. 66, Perpignan, Laboratoire d’Ecologie Médicale et Pathologie Parasitaire (P r J.-A. Rioux), Faculté de Médecine, F. 34 - Montpellier, France.
Le cysticercoïde d'Hymenolepis brusatae Vaucher, 1971, Hymenolepididae, parasite à l’état adulte de Musaraignes du genre Crocidura, est mis en évidence chez deux Phlebotomes ♀, Phlebotomus perniciosus Newstead, 1911, et Phlebotomus mascittii Grassi, 1908, provenant d’un lot de 15.436 exemplaires capturés en Corse en 1969 et 1970.
Cette observation permet d’élucider un des aspects du cycle évolutif d’Hymenolepis brusatae dont les adultes sont parasites en Corse de Crocidura russula cyrnensis (Miller, 1907). Elle apporte, par ailleurs, un argument supplémentaire à l’hypothèse antérieurement émise, de la présence habituelle de larves de Phlébotomes dans les terriers des Micromammifères.
Abstract
The cysticercoid of Hymenolepis brusatae Vaucher, 1971, Hymenolepididae which is a parasite, when adult, of the shrew- mouse of the genus Crocidura has been found in two females of sandflies, Phlebotomus perniciosus Newstead, 1911, and Phlebotomus mascittii Grassi, 1908, coming from a lot of 15.436 Phlebotominae captured in Corsica during the 1969 and 1970 summer.
This observation permits one to elucidate one part of the evolutionary cycle of this Cestode, the adults of which are parasites of Crocidura russula cyrnensis (Miller, 1907), in Corsica. The presence, in sandflies, of this parasite, constitutes, in other respects, a supplementary argument to the hypothesis previously set forth, of the habitual presence of the sandflies larvae in the burrows of the micro mammals.
© Masson, Paris 1971, transferred to Société Française de Parasitologie
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