The diversity of the Digenea of Australian animals


Autoria(s): Cribb, T. H.
Data(s)

01/01/1998

Resumo

The Digenea is one of five major helminth assemblages represented in Australian animals. History of the study of digeneans in Australia is reviewed briefly to show that it has never been subjected to the kind of sustained study needed to reach an understanding of it. The Australian vertebrate fauna comprises over 5500 species. These have so far been shown to harbour just over 70 families, about 306 genera and 566 species of digeneans. Digeneans occur in all classes of vertebrates in Australia but are distributed very unevenly; aquatic hosts are generally most heavily infected, but many terrestrial species are also infected. Particular weaknesses in knowledge of the fauna concern the bats, cetaceans and teleosts. Another weakness is in knowledge of life-cycles; representative life-cycles are known for only about 20 of the 70 families known in Australia. Estimates of the overall size of the fauna are dependent on an understanding of sampling strategies, the heterogeneity of distribution of the fauna, and the nature of host-specificity. These subjects are reviewed briefly and an estimate of the total fauna is made. There may be as many as 6000 species of digeneans in Australia. (C) 1998 Australian Society for Parasitology. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:34958

Idioma(s)

eng

Palavras-Chave #Parasitology #Trematoda #Digenea #Australia #Diversity #Species-richness #History #Host-specificity #Marsupialia
Tipo

Journal Article