Systematic Parasitology

, Volume 15, Issue 3, pp 159–202 | Cite as

The Lepocreadiidae (Digenea) of fishes of the north-east Atlantic: review of the genera Opechona Looss, 1907 and Prodistomum Linton, 1910

  • Rodney A. Bray
  • David I. Gibson
Article

Abstract

The genera Opechona Looss and Prodistomum Linton are redefined: the latter is re-established, its diagnostic character being the lack of a uroproct. Pharyngora Lebour and Neopechona Stunkard are considered synonyms of Opechona, and Acanthocolpoides Travassos, Freitas & Bührnheim is considered a synonym of Prodistomum. Opechona bacillaris (Molin) and Prodistomum [originally Distomum] polonii (Molin) n. comb. are described from the NE Atlantic Ocean. Separate revisions with keys to Opechona, Prodistomum and ‘Opechona-like’ species incertae sedis are presented. Opechona is considered to contain: O. bacillaris (type-species), O. alaskensis Ward & Fillingham, O. [originally Neopechona] cablei (Stunkard) n. comb., O. chloroscombri Nahhas & Cable, O. occidentalis Montgomery, O. parvasoma Ching sp. inq., O. pharyngodactyla Manter, O. [originally Distomum] pyriforme (Linton) n. comb. and O. sebastodis (Yamaguti). Prodistomum includes: P. gracile Linton (type-species), P. [originally Opechona] girellae (Yamaguti) n. comb., P. [originally Opechona] hynnodi (Yamaguti) n. comb., P. [originally Opechona] menidiae (Manter) n. comb., P. [originally Pharyngora] orientalis (Layman) n. comb., P. polonii and P. [originally Opechona] waltairensis (Madhavi) n. comb. Some species are considered ‘Opechona-like’ species incertae sedis: O. formiae Oshmarin, O. siddiqii Ahmad, 1986 nec 1984, O. mohsini Ahmad, O. magnatestis Gaevskaya & Kovaleva, O. vinodae Ahmad, O. travassosi Ahmad, ‘Lepidapedon’ nelsoni Gupta & Mehrotra and O. siddiqi Ahmad, 1984 nec 1986. The related genera Cephalolepidapedon Yamaguti and Clavogalea Bray and the synonymies of their constituent species are discussed, and further comments are made on related genera and misplaced species. The new combination Clavogalea [originally Stephanostomum] trachinoti (Fischthal & Thomas) is made. The taxonomy, life-history, host-specificity and zoogeography of the genera are briefly discussed.

Keywords

Definitive Host Ventral Sucker Oral Sucker Genital Pore Pyloric Caecum 
These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

Preview

Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.

Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.

References

  1. Ahmad, J. (1982) On a new species of the genus Opechona Looss, 1907 (Digenea: Lepocreadiidae) from a marine fish, Liognathus daura (Cuv.) from the Arabian sea. Proceedings of the Indian Science Congress (Mysore), 69 (3, Section VII), 126–127 (Abstract).Google Scholar
  2. Ahmad, J. (1984a) Studies on five new digenetic trematodes from marine fishes from the Arabian Sea, off the Bombay coast, India. Pakistan Journal of Zoology, 16, 45–59.Google Scholar
  3. Ahmad, J. (1984b) Some digenetic trematodes (Lepocreadiidae) from marine fishes, off Panaji coast, Arabian Sea. Pakistan Journal of Zoology, 16, 61–73.Google Scholar
  4. Ahmad, J. (1985) Digenetic trematodes of marine fishes from the Arabian Sea. Part 43. Pakistan Journal of Zoology, 17, 147–164.Google Scholar
  5. Ahmad, J. (1986) On a new species of the trematode genus Opechona Looss, 1907 (Trematoda, Lepocreadiidae) from a marine fish, Pomadasys maculatus (Bloch) of the Arabian Sea. Acta Parasitologica Polonica, 30, 109–114.Google Scholar
  6. Aleshkina, L.D. (1979) Characteristics of trematode fauna in fish of the south- eastern Atlantic. In: Bauer, O.N. et al. (Eds) Tezisy-Dokladov. VII All-Union Conference on Parasites and Diseases of Fish. Leningrad: Nauka Leningradskoe Otdelenie, 5–6 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  7. Amato, J.F.R. (1983) Digenetic trematodes of percoid fishes of Florianopolis, Southern Brasil-Homalometridae, Lepocreadiidae, and Opecoelidae, with the description of seven new species. Revista Brasileira de Biologia, 43, 73–98.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  8. Anderson, H.J.jr. (1970) Annotated list of parasites of the bluefish Pomatomus saltatrix. Technical Papers of the Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife, 54, 1–45.Google Scholar
  9. Ankel, W.E. (1958) Die Medusen und der Wurm. Giessener Hochschulblätter, 5 Jahrg., no. 4, Februar 1958 [not seen, cited as in Køie, 1975].Google Scholar
  10. Arai, H.P. (1969) Preliminary report on the parasites of certain marine fishes of British Columbia. Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 26, 2319–2337.Google Scholar
  11. Barbagallo, P. & Drago, U. (1903) Primo contributo allo studio della fauna elmintologica dei pesci della Sicilia orientale. Archives de Parasitologie, 7, 408–427.Google Scholar
  12. Bhutta, M.S. & Khan, D. (1975) Digenetic trematodes of vertebrates from Pakistan. Bulletin of the Department of Zoology University of the Panjab (New Series), 8, 1–175.Google Scholar
  13. Bilqees, F.M. (1976) Two new lepocreadiid trematodes from fishes of the Karachi coast. Norwegian Journal of Zoology, 24, 195–199.Google Scholar
  14. Bilqees, F.M. (1981) Digenetic trematodes fishes of Karachi coast. Karachi: Kifayat Academy, 207 pp.Google Scholar
  15. Bray, R.A. (1985) Some helminth parasites of marine fishes of South Africa: Families Gorgoderidae, Zoogonidae, Cephaloporidae, Acanthocolpidae and Lepocreadiidae (Digenea). Journal of Natural History, 19, 377–405.Google Scholar
  16. Bray, R.A. & Gibson, D.I. (1977) The Accacoeliidae (Digenea) of fishes from the north-east Atlantic. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) (Zoology Series), 31, 51–99.Google Scholar
  17. Bray, R.A. & Gibson, D.I. (1988) The Lepocreadiidae (Digenea) of fishes from the north-east Atlantic: review of the genus Paralepidapedon Shimazu & Shimura, 1984, with a description of P. williamsi n. sp. Systematic Parasitology, 12, 87–92.Google Scholar
  18. Bray, R.A. & Gibson, D.I. (1989) The Lepocreadiidae (Digenea) of fishes from the north-east Atlantic: review of the genus Neolepidapedon Manter, 1954, with a description of N. smithi n. sp. Systematic Parasitology 13, 11–23.Google Scholar
  19. Butt, A.J. & Collard, S.B. (1976) Infestation of medusae of Podocoryne minima (Anthomedusae: Hydractiniidae) by metacercariae of Opechona sp. (Digenea: Lepocreadiidae) from a Gulf of Guinea neuston collection. ASB Bulletin, 23, 47.Google Scholar
  20. Chernyshenko, A. (1949) [New helminths of fishes in the Black Sea.] Trudy Odesskogo Derzhavnogo Universiteta imeni I.I. Mechnikova (Seriya Biologicheskikh Nauk), 57(4), 79–91 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  21. Chernyshenko, A.S. (1955) [Materials on the parasite fauna of fish in Odessa Bay.] Trudy Odesskogo Gosuniversiteta imeni I.I. Mechnikova (Seriya Biologicheskikh Nauk), 145(7), 211–222 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  22. Ching, H.L. (1959) Studies on some digenetic trematodes of Puget Sound, Washington. Dissertation Abstracts, 20, 1905.Google Scholar
  23. Ching, H.L. (1960) Some digenetic trematodes of fishes of Friday Harbor, Washington. Journal of Parasitology, 46, 241–250.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  24. Chulkova, V.N. (1939) Parasites of marine fishes in the vicinity of Batumi (Black Sea). Uchenye Zapiski Leningradskogo Gosudarstvennogo Universiteta (Seriya Biologii), 2(43), 21–32 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  25. Collette, B.B. & Nauen, C.E. (1983) FAO species catalogue. Vol. 2. Scombrids of the world. An annotated and illustrated catalogue of tunas, mackerels, bonitos and related species known to date. FAO Fisheries Synopsis, No. 125 2, 137 pp.Google Scholar
  26. Corkum, K.C. (1959) Some trematodes parasites of fishes from the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Proceedings of the Louisiana Academy of Sciences, 22, 17–29.Google Scholar
  27. Dawes, B. (1947) The Trematoda of British fishes. London: Ray Society, 364 pp.Google Scholar
  28. Dolgikh, A.V. (1965) [Larval trematodes - parasites of molluscs from the Crimean shore of the Black Sea.] Autoreferat dissertachii na soiskanie uchenoj stepeni kandidata biologicheskikh nauk. Lovoskii Ordena Lenina gosudarstvennikh Universitet im. I. Franko, 20pp. (In Russian).Google Scholar
  29. Dolgikh, A.V. (1966a) [Helminth fauna of molluscs of the family Veneridae from the oceans of the world.] In: [Questions of marine biology. Essays for the Symposium of Young Scientists]. Sevastopol, 1966 Kiev: Naukova Dumka, 31–33 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  30. Dolgikh, A.V. (1966b) [Helminth fauna of molluscs from Novorossiysk Bay.] Biologiya Morya, Kiev, [Helminthofauna of animals of the Southern Seas], 114–133 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  31. Dolgikh, A.V. (1968) Helminthofauna of molluscs of the northern part of the Black Sea. Biologiya Morya, Kiev, 14, 114–126 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  32. Dolgikh, A.V. (1970) [Material on the helminth fauna of molluscs of the Caucasian coasts of the Black Sea.] Biologiya Morya. Kiev, 20, 3–28 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  33. Dollfus, R.P. (1963) Liste des coelenteres marins, Palearctiques et Indiens, ou ont trouves des trematodes digenetiques. Bulletin de I'lnstitut des Pêches Maritimes du Maroc, 9–10, 33–57.Google Scholar
  34. Dyer, W.G., Williams, E.H.jr. & Williams, L.B. (1985) Digenetic trematodes of marine fishes of the western and southwestern coasts of Puerto Rico. Proceedings of the Helminthological Society of Washington, 52, 85–94.Google Scholar
  35. Eremina, B.A. (1970) [The infection of certain commercial fish on the southwestern coast of Africa.] In: Vodyanitskii, V.A. (Ed.) [Problems In Marine Parasitology. First All-Union Symposium on the parasites and diseases of marine animals, Sevastopol, 1970]. Kiev: Naukova Dumka, 26–29 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  36. Fabio, S.P.de & Rolas, F.J.T.-S. (1974) Contribuição ao conhecimento das espêcies do subgênero Lepidapedon (Lepidapedoides) Yamaguti, 1970. (Trematoda, Lepidapedinae). Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, 72, 119–124.Google Scholar
  37. Fernandes, B.M.M., Kohn, A. & Pinto, R.M. (1985) Aspidogastrid and digenetic trematodes parasites of marine fishes of the coast of Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil. Revista Brasileira de Biologia, 45, 109–116.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  38. Fischthal, J.H. (1980) Some digenetic trematodes of marine fishes from Israel's Mediterranean coast and their zoogeography, especially those from Red Sea immigrant fishes. Zoologica Scripta, 9, 11–23.Google Scholar
  39. Fischthal, J.H. & Thomas, J.D. (1968) Digenetic trematodes of marine fishes from Ghana: Families Acanthocolpidae, Bucephalidae, Didymozoidae. Proceedings of the Helminthological Society of Washington, 35, 237–247.Google Scholar
  40. Fischthal, J.H. & Thomas, J.D. (1970) Digenetic trematodes of marine fishes from Ghana. Family Lepocreadiidae. Journal of Helminthology, 44, 365–386.Google Scholar
  41. Franc, A. (1951) Le zooplancton de la région de Dinard-Saint Malo. Bulletin du Laboratoire Maritime de Dinard, 34 25–40.Google Scholar
  42. Fraser, J.H. (1970) The ecology of the ctenophore Pleurobrachia pileus in Scottish waters. Journal du Conseil International pour I'Exploration de la Mer, 33, 149–168.Google Scholar
  43. Gaevskaja, A.V. & Aleshkina, L.D. (1985) New species of trematodes from the fishes of eastern Atlantic. Parazitologiya, 19, 105–112 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  44. Gaevskaya, A.V. & Kovaleva, A.A. (1976) Trematodofauna of some mass species of fish of the south-west Atlantic. Trudy AtlantNIRO, 60, 3–14 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  45. Gaevskaya, A.V. & Kovaleva, A.A. (1978) Materials on fish trematodes in the south-western Atlantic. Vestnik Zoologii, (3), 60–66 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  46. Gaevskaya, A.V. & Kovaleva, A.A. (1980a) Ecological-geographical peculiarities of parasitic fauna of the Atlantic horse mackerel. Trudy AtlantNIRO (Study in the Atlantic Biological Resources), 18–24 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  47. Gaevskaya, A.V. & Kovaleva, A.A. (1980b) On the reasons of similarity and differences in parasitofauna of two subspecies of common horse mackerel of the Atlantic Ocean. Nauchnyi Doklady Vysshei Shkoly. Biologicheskie Nauki (6), 52–56 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  48. Gaevskaya, A.V. & Kovaleva, A.A. (1982) Trematodes infesting Atlantic horse mackerels of the genus Trachurus. Gidrobiologicheskii Zhurnal, 18(1), 60–65 (In Russian: English translation Hydrobiological Journal, 18(1), 50–55).Google Scholar
  49. Gibson, D.I. & Bray, R.A. (1979) The Hemiuroidea: terminology, systematics and evolution. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) (Zoology Series), 36, 35–146.Google Scholar
  50. Gijon, H., Lopez-Roman, R., de Armas, F. & Valladares, B. (1982) Some Digenea of marine fishes in the Canary Islands. Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology (Supplement: Parasites-Their world and ours. Abstracts of the Fifth International Congress of Parasitology, Toronto), 712.Google Scholar
  51. Gupta, N.K. & Mehrotra, V. (1969) Studies on some of the digenetic trematodes of marine food fishes from Ernakulam (South India). Proceedings of the Indian Science Congress (Bombay), 56, 517–518 (Abstract).Google Scholar
  52. Gupta, N.K. & Mehrotra, V. (1972) On Lepidapedon nelsoni n. sp. from Pampas argentius [sic] and Parastromateus niger (marine fishes) at Ernakulam. Research Bulletin of the Panjab University (New Series), 22, 461–464.Google Scholar
  53. Gupta, N.K. & Sehgal, S.K. (1971) Some allocreadiid trematodes from marine food fishes of India. Research Bulletin of the Punjab University (New Series), 21, 267–275.Google Scholar
  54. Gupta, P.C. & Gupta, V.C. (1987) Two new species of the genus Lepocreadium Stossich, 1904 (Digenea-lepocreadiidae) from marine fishes, Bay of Bengal, off Puri coast, Orissa, India. Proceedings of Parasitology, 3, 36–41.Google Scholar
  55. Gupta, V. & Ahmad, J. (1977) Digenetic trematodes of marine fishes. On some new and known digenetic trematodes from marine fishes of Bay of Bengal, Puri, Orissa. Rivista di Parasitologia, 38, 181–191.Google Scholar
  56. Hadzhiiski, Z. (1980) On the parasitic fauna in chub mackerel (Scomber colias Gmelin) from the Black Sea. Izvestiya Institut Rybnykh Resursov-Varna, 18, 147–154 (In Bulgarian).Google Scholar
  57. Hafeezullah, M. (1970) Lepocreadid [sic] trematodes of marine fishes of India. Parasitology, 61, 345–356.Google Scholar
  58. Hopkirk, C.S.M. (1927) Intermediate host of liver-fluke in New Zealand. Recorded as the common water snail. New Zealand Journal of Agriculture, 175–177.Google Scholar
  59. Ichihara, A. (1969) On the parasites of fishes and shell-fishes in Sagami Bay. (7). Parasitic helminths of Sebastiscus marmoratus (Cuvier). Japanese Journal of Parasitology, 18, 419–420.Google Scholar
  60. Ichihara, A. (1970) On the parasites of fishes and shell-fishes of Sagami Bay. (8). Parasitic helminths of Girella punctata Gray. Japanese Journal of Parasitology, 19, 412.Google Scholar
  61. Ichihara, A. (1986) On the helminths of marine fish in Sagami Bay (II). In: Howell, M.J. (Ed.) Parasitology-Quo Vadit? Handbook (Program and Abstracts. Sixth International Congress of Parasitology, Brisbane) Canberra: Australian Academy of Science, 154.Google Scholar
  62. Ichihara, A., Kato, K., Kamegai, Sh., Kamegai, S., Nonobe, H. & Machida, M. (1966) On the parasites of fishes and shell-fishes in Sagami Bay. IV. Parasites of Pneumatophorus japonicus japonicus (Houttuyn). Japanese Journal of Parasitology, 15, 345–346 (In Japanese).Google Scholar
  63. Ichihara, A., Kato, K., Kamegai, Sh. & Machida, M. (1968) On the parasites of fishes and shell-fishes in Sagami Bay. (No. 4). Parasitic helminths of mackerel, Pneumatophorus japonicus japonicus (Houttuuyn [sic]). Research Bulletin of the Meguro Parasitological Museum, 2, 45–60.Google Scholar
  64. Janiszewska, J. (1953) Some Adriatic Sea fish trematodes. Zoologica Poloniae, 6, 20–48.Google Scholar
  65. Jardas, I. & Hristovski, N. (1985) A new contribution to the knowledge of helminth parasite fauna of fishes from the channels between the mid-Dalmation Islands, Adriatic Sea. Acta Adriatica, 26, 145–164.Google Scholar
  66. Jarling, C. & Kapp, H. (1985) Infestation of Atlantic chaetognaths with helminths and ciliates. Diseases of Aquatic Organisms, 1, 23–28.Google Scholar
  67. Jonathan, S.R. (1950) The life history of the rumen flukes of cattle in New Zealand. Australian Veterinary Journal, 26, 149–151.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  68. Køie, M. (1975) On the morphology and life-history of Opechona bacillaris (Molin, 1859) Looss, 1907 (Trematoda, Lepocreadiidae). Ophelia, 13, 63–86.Google Scholar
  69. Køie, M. (1981) Digenetic trematodes in some gadid and pleuronectid fishes from Danish waters. Information, Abo Akademi, 16, 61–62.Google Scholar
  70. Køie, M. (1984) Digenetic trematodes from Gadus morhua L. (Osteichthyes, Gadidae) from Danish and adjacent waters, with special reference to their life-histories. Ophelia, 23, 195–222.Google Scholar
  71. Korotaeva, V.D. (1968) [Helminth fauna of Cottidae.] In: Skrjabin, K.I. & Mamaev, Y.L. (Eds) [Helminths of animals of the Pacific Ocean.] Moscow: Izdatel'stvo Nauka, 89–96 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  72. Korotaeva, V.D. (1969) [Helminths of some food fishes of the order Clupeiformes in the Sea near Australia and New Zealand.] Problemy Parazitologii. Trudy Nauchnoi Konferentsii Parasitologov, USSR, 6(2), 237–238 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  73. Korotaeva, V.D. (1970) [Parasite fauna of two species of commerical fish of the family Cheilodactylidae in the region of Australia and New Zealand.] In: Vodyanitskii, V.A. (Ed.) [Problems in marine parasitology. First All-Union Symposium on the parasites and diseases of marine animals, Sevastopol, 1970], Kiev: Naukova Dumka, 44–46 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  74. Korotaeva, V.D. (1974) Helminths of some marine commercial fishes of the sub-order Scomberoidei from the Australian Region. Izvestiya Tikhookeanskogo Nauchno-Issledovatel'skogo Instituta Rybnogo Khozyaistva i Okeanografii, 88, 61–66 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  75. Kostina, T.A. (1961) [The parasite fauna of Spicara smaris from the Black Sea.] Trudy Sevastopol'skoi Biologicheskoi Stantsii, 14, 274–285 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  76. Koval, V.P. & Otsupok, N.D. (1964) [Trematodes of some economically important fish from the Black Sea in the Evpatoriya area.] Problemy Parazitologii. Trudy Ukrainskogo Respublikanskogo Nauchnogo Obshchestva Parasitologov, 3, 48–52 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  77. Koval, V.P. & Zarichkova, D.B. (1962) [A study of the trematodes of fishes from the Black Sea.] Visnyk Kyyivs'koho Universytetu (Seriya Biolohiyi), 6, 141–146 (In Ukrainian).Google Scholar
  78. Kovaleva, A.A. (1963) [Helminth fauna of large horse mackerel in the Black Sea.] Materialy Nauchnoi Konferentsii Vsesoyuznogo Obshchestva Gel'mintologov, (1), 140–141 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  79. Kovaleva, A.A. (1964) [Changes to the helminth fauna of the Black Sea horse mackerel dependent on migration and season.] Materialy Nauchnoi Konferentsii Vsesoyuznogo Obshchestva Gel'mintologov, (1), 174–177 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  80. Kovaleva, A.A. (1965) [The helminth fauna of local stocks of the Carangidae in the Black Sea.] Materialy Nauchnoi Konferentsii Vsesoyuznogo Obshchestva Gel'mintologov, (2), 121–126 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  81. Kovaleva, A.A. (1966) [The helminth fauna of Trachurus trachurus in the area of the Straits of Gibraltar.] Voprosy Morskoi Biologii, 64–65 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  82. Kovaleva, A.A. (1968) The effect of the age and food composition on the helminthofauna of Trachurus mediterraneus ponticus Aleev. Biologiya Morya, Kiev, 14, 47–53 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  83. Kovaleva, A.A. (1969a) [Helminth fauna of Trachurus in the Atlantic Ocean basin.] Materialy Nauchnoi Konferentsii Vsesoyuznogo Obshchestva Gel'mintologov, (1), 121–134 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  84. Kovaleva, A.A. (1969b) Effect of age and food composition on helminthofauna of Trachurus mediterraneus ponticus Aleev. Biologiya Morya. Kiev, 14, 47–53 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  85. Kovaleva, A.A. (1970) [Helminth fauna of the mackerel genus Trachurus (Carangidae, Perciformes) in the Atlantic Ocean basin.] Biologiya Morya. Kiev, 20, 37–66 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  86. Layman, E.M. (1930) Parasitic worms from the fishes of Peter the Great Bay. Izvestiya Tikhookeanskoi Nauchno-Promvsloyoi Ostantsii, 3, 1–120 (In Russian and German).Google Scholar
  87. Lebedev, B.I. (1970) [Helminths of fish of the South China Sea]. In: Oshmarin, P.G., Mamaev, Y.L. & Lebedev, B.I. (Eds) [Helminths of animals of South East Asia.] Moscow: Izdatel'stvo Nauka, 191–216 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  88. Lebour, M.V. (1908) Fish trematodes of the Northumberland coast. Report on the Scientific Investigations. Northumberland Sea Fisheries Committee, (1907), 23–67.Google Scholar
  89. Lebour, M.V. (1916) Medusae as hosts for larval trematodes. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 11, 57–59.Google Scholar
  90. Lebour, M.V. (1917) Some parasites of Sagitta bipunctata. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 11, 201–206.Google Scholar
  91. Lebour, M.V. (1918) A trematode larva from Buccinum and notes on trematodes from post-larval fish. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 11, 514–518.Google Scholar
  92. Lebour, M.V. (1919) Feeding habits of some young fish. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 12, 22–47.Google Scholar
  93. Linton, E. (1900) Fish parasites collected at Woods Hole in 1898. United States Fish Commission Bulletin for 1899, 22, 267–304.Google Scholar
  94. Linton, E. (1901) Parasites of fishes of the Woods Hole region. United States Fish Commission Bulletin for 1899, 22, 405–492.Google Scholar
  95. Linton, E. (1905) Parasites of fishes of Beaufort, North Carolina. Bulletin of the Bureau of Fisheries for 1904, 24, 321–428.Google Scholar
  96. Linton, E. (1910) Helminth fauna of the Dry Tortugas. II. Trematodes. Papers from the Tortugas Laboratory of the Carnegie Institute of Washington, 4, 11–98.Google Scholar
  97. Linton, E. (1940) Trematodes from fishes mainly from the Woods Hole region, Massachusetts. Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 88, 1–172.Google Scholar
  98. Lopez-Roman, R. (1979) Acanthocolpoides guevaria n. sp. parasito intestinal de Scomber scombrus L. capturados en aguas de las Islas Canarias. Revista Ibérica de Parasitologia, 39, 485–492.Google Scholar
  99. Love, M.S. & Moser, M. (1983) A checklist of parasites of California, Oregon and Washington marine and estuarine fishes. NOAA Technical Report NMFS SSRF-777, 577 pp.Google Scholar
  100. Love, M.S., Shriner, K. & Morris, P. (1984) Parasites of olive rockfish, Sebastes serranoides, (Scorpaenidae) off central California. Fishery Bulletin, 82, 530–537.Google Scholar
  101. Macfarlane, W.V. (1945) The life cycle of the heterophyoid trematode Telogaster opisthorchis n.g., n.sp. Transactions of the Royal Society of New Zealand, 75, 218–230.Google Scholar
  102. Macfarlane, W.V. (1951) The life cycle of Stegodexamene anguillae n.g., n.sp., an allocreadiid trematode from New Zealand. Parasitology, 41, 1–10.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  103. Machida, M. (1985) Helminth parasites of cyclopterid fish, Aptocyclus ventricosus, caught off northern Japan. Bulletin of the National Science Museum, Series A (Zoology), 11, 123–128.Google Scholar
  104. Machida, M., Araki, J., Kamiya, H. & Ohbayashi, M. (1972) Trematodes collected from sea fishes of the Hidaka district, Hokkaido. Memoirs of the National Science Museum. Tokyo, 5, 1–9.Google Scholar
  105. Machida, M., Ichihara, A. & Kamegai, S. (1970) Digenetic trematodes collected from the fishes in the sea north of the Tsushima Islands. Memoirs of the National Science Museum, 3, 101–112.Google Scholar
  106. MacKenzie, K. (1974) Immature digeneans from the alimentary tract of larval and juvenile pelagic stages of haddock, Melanogrammus aeglefinus (L.). Journal of Fish Biology, 6, 103–106.Google Scholar
  107. Madhavi, R. (1972) Digenetic trematodes from marine fishes of Waltair Coast, Bay of Bengal. I. Family Lepocreadiidae. Journal of Parasitology, 58, 217–225.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  108. Madhavi, R., Narasimhulu, S.V. & Shameem, U. (1986) Digenetic trematodes from marine fishes of Kalingapatnam coast, Bay of Bengal. Families Lepocreadiidae, Deropristidae and Schistorchiidae. Rivista di Parasitologia, 3(47), 111–119.Google Scholar
  109. Mamaev, Y.L. (1965) [Helminths of fish in the Bering Sea.] In: Leonov, V.A. et al. (Eds) [Parasitic worms of domestic and wild animals.] Vladivostok: Akademii Nauk SSSR, 168–188 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  110. Mamaev, Y.L. (1970) [Helminths of fish of the Gulf of Tong King.] In: Oshmarin, P.G., Mamaev, Y.L. & Lebedev, B.I. (Eds) [Helminths of animals of South East Asia.] Moscow: Izdatel'stvo Nauka, 127–190 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  111. Mamaev, Y.L. & Baeva, O.M. (1963) Helminth fauna of Theragra chalcogramma (Gadiiformes) from Kamchatka waters, and on the use of this fish as food. Helminthologia, 4, 318–331 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  112. Mamaev, Y.L., Parukhin, A.M. & Baeva, O.M. (1963) [Parasitic worms of flat-fishes from the far-eastern seas.] In: Oshmarin, P.G. (Ed.) [Helminths of animals of Primore and the Pacific Ocean.] Moscow: Izdatel'styo Akademii Nauk SSSR, 82–113 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  113. Manter, H.W. (1931) Some digenetic trematodes of marine fishes of beaufort, North Carolina. Parasitology, 23, 396–411.Google Scholar
  114. Manter, H.W. (1940) Digenetic trematodes of fishes from the Galapagos Islands and the neighboring Pacific. Allan Hancock Pacific Expeditions, 2(14), 323–497.Google Scholar
  115. Manter, H.W. (1947) The digenetic trematodes of marine fishes of Tortugas, Florida. American Midland Naturalist, 38, 257–416.Google Scholar
  116. Manter, H.W. & Van Cleave, H.J. (1951) Some digenetic trematodes, including eight new species, from marine fishes of La Jolla, Calif. Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 101, 315–340.Google Scholar
  117. Margolis, L. (1971) Polychaetes as intermediate hosts of helminth parasites of vertebrates: A review. Journal of Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 28, 1383–1392.Google Scholar
  118. Markowski, S. (1933) Die Eingeweidewürmer der Fische des Polnischen Balticums (Trematoda, Cestoda, Nematoda, Acanthocephala). Archiwum Hydrobiologii i Rybactwa, 7, 1–58.Google Scholar
  119. Marshall, S.M. (1925) A survey of Clyde plankton. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 45, 117–141.Google Scholar
  120. Martin, W.E. (1978) Digenetic trematodes of the marine fish, Girella nigricans (Ayres), from Southern California with the description of two new species. Proceedings of the Helminthological Society of Washington, 45, 175–181.Google Scholar
  121. McFarlane, S.H. (1936) A study of the endoparasitic trematodes from marine fishes of Departure Bay, B.C. Journal of the Biological Board of Canada, 2, 335–347.Google Scholar
  122. Molin, R. (1859a) Prospectus helminthum, quae in parte secundum prodromi faunae helminthologicae Venetae continentur. Sitzungsberichte de Akademie der Wissenschaften. Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Classe. Wien (1858), 33, 287–302.Google Scholar
  123. Molin, R. (1859b) Nuovi Myzelmintha raccolti ed esaminati. Sitzungsberichte de Akademie de Wissenschaften. Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Classe. Wien, 37, 818–854.Google Scholar
  124. Molin, R. (1861) Prodromus faunae helminthologicae Venetae adjectis disquisitionibus anatomicis et criticis. Denkscriften der Kaiserlichen Akademie de Wissenschaften. Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Classe. Wien, 19, 189–338.Google Scholar
  125. Montgomery, W.R. (1957) Studies on digenetic trematodes from marine fishes of La Jolla, California. Transactions of the American Microscopical Society, 76, 13–35.Google Scholar
  126. Nahhas, F.M. & Cable, R.M. (1964) Digenetic and aspidogastrid trematodes from marine fishes of Curaçao and Jamaica. Tulane Studies in Zoology, 11, 167–228.Google Scholar
  127. Nahhas, F.M. & Short, R.B. (1965) Digenetic trematodes of marine fishes from Apalachee Bay, Gulf of Mexico. Tulane Studies in Zoology, 12, 39–50.Google Scholar
  128. Nicoll, W. (1909) A contribution towards a knowledge of the Entozoa of British marine fishes. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, (Series 8), 4, 1–25.Google Scholar
  129. Nicoll, W. (1910) On the Entozoa of fishes from the Firth of Clyde. Parasitology, 3, 322–359.Google Scholar
  130. Nicoll, W. (1913) Trematode parasites from the food-fishes of the North Sea. Parasitology, 6, 188–194.Google Scholar
  131. Nicoll, W. (1914) Trematode parasites of fishes from the English Channel. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 10, 466–505.Google Scholar
  132. Nikolaeva, V.M. (1963) [Features of the parasitic fauna relating to local shoals of Black Sea forms of anchovy, sprat and horse mackerel.] Trudy Sevastopol'skoi Biologicheskoi Stantsii, 6, 387–438 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  133. Nikolaeva, V.M. & Kovaleva, A.A. (1966) [Parasite fauna of Trachurus from the Mediterranean Basin.] Biologiya Morya. Kiev (Helminthofauna of animals of the Southern Seas), 67–79 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  134. Nikolaeva, V.M. & Parukhin, A.M. (1969) [Trematode fauna of fish in the Mediterranean.] Problemy Parazitologii. Trudy Nauchnoi Konferentsii Parasitologov USSR, 6, 259–262 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  135. Odhner, T. (1911) Zum natürlichen System der digenen Trematoden. III. (Ein weiterer Fall von sekundarem Anus.) Zoologischer Anzeiger, 38, 97–117.Google Scholar
  136. Olsson, P. (1868) Entozoa, iakttagna hos Skandinaviska hafsfiskar. I. Platyelminthes. Acta Universitatis Lundensis, 4, 1–64.Google Scholar
  137. Olsson, P. (1876) Bidrag till Skandinaviens helminthfauna. I. Kongliga Svenska Vetenskaps-Akademiens Handlingar, 14(1), 1–35.Google Scholar
  138. Orecchia, P. & Paggi, L. (1978) Aspetti di sistematica e di ecologia degli elminti parassiti di pesci marini studiati presso I'Istituto di Parassitologia dell‘Universita’ di Roma. Parassitologia, 20, 73–89.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  139. Oshmarin, P.G. (1965) On the trematode fauna of marine and freshwater fishes of Vietnam. In: Leonov, A.A., Mamaev, Y.L. & Oshmarin, P.G. (Eds) Parasitic worms of domestic and wild animals. Vladivostok: Akademiya Nauk SSSR, 213–249 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  140. Osmanov, S.U. (1940) [Studies on the parasite-fauna of fish from the Black Sea.] Uchenye Zapiski. Leningradskogo Gosudarstvennogo Pedagogicheskogo Instituta im Gertsena, 30, 187–265 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  141. Overstreet, R.M. (1969) Digenetic trematodes of marine teleost fishes from Biscayne Bay, Florida. Tulane Studies In Zoology and Botany, 15, 119–176.Google Scholar
  142. Papoutsoglou, S.E. (1976) Metazoan parasites of fishes from Saronicos Gulf, Athens-Greece. Thalassographica, 1, 69–102.Google Scholar
  143. Parukhin, A.M. (1966) [On the species composition of the helminth fauna of fishes in the South Atlantic.] Materialy Nauchnoi Konferentsii Vsesoyuznogo Obshchestva Gel'mintologov, (3), 219–222 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  144. Parukhin, A.M. (1968) Helminthofauna of fishes of South Atlantic. Biologiya Morya. Kiev, 14, 96–113 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  145. Parukhin, A.M. (1970) [On the study of the trematode fauna in fish from the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden.] Biologiya Morya. Kiev, 20, 187–213 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  146. Parukhin, A.M. (1976a) [Parasitic worms of food fishes of the Southern Seas.] Kiev: Naukova Dumka, 183 pp. (In Russian).Google Scholar
  147. Parukhin, A.M. (1976b) Parasites of fish in the Indian Ocean. Biologiya Morya. Kiev, 38, 76–84 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  148. Parukhin, A.M. (1978) On studies in trematodofauna of the Indian and Atlantic Oceans fishes. Biologiya Morya. Kiev, 45, 90–99 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  149. Parukhin, A.M. (1985) [Helminth fauna of commercial fishes from the Saya-de-Mal'ya sand bank (Indian Ocean).] In: Bauer, O.N. et al. (Eds) Abstracts of Papers. VIIIth All-Union Congress on Parasites and diseases of fishes (Astrakhan, 1985). Leningrad: Izdatel'stvo ‘Nauka’ Leningrad Otdelenie, 108–109 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  150. Parukhin, A.M. (1986) Peculiarities of nototheniid fish helminth fauna in subantarctic sector of Indian Ocean. Vestnik Zoologii, (3), 6–9 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  151. Parukhin, A.M. (1988) The helminth fauna of the commercial fishes from Saya-de-Malya Bank (the Indian Ocean). Nauchnye Doklady Vysshei Shkoli. Biologicheskie Nauki, (8), 34–37 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  152. Parukhin, A.M. & Lyadov, V.N. (1981) Parasitofauna of Notothenioidei from waters of the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. Vestnik Zoologii, (3), 90–94 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  153. Parukhin, A.M. & Lyadov, V.N. (1982) Helminth fauna of food Nototheniidae fishes from Kergelen subregion. Ekologiya Morya, 10, 49–56 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  154. Parukhin, A.M., Naidenova, N.N. & Nikolaeva, V.M. (1971) The helminth fauna of fishes caught in the Mediterranean Sea. In: Vodyanitskii, V.A. (Ed.) Expeditionary investigations in the Mediterranean Sea in May-July 1970 (66th voyage of the RV Ak. A. Kovalevsky). Kiev: Naukova Dumka, 64–87 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  155. Parukhin, A.M. & Zaitsev, A.K. (1984) The infestation by helminths of different age Notothenia squamifrons in subantarctic part of Indian Ocean. Nauchnve Doklady Vysshei Shkoli. Biologicheskie Nauki, (10), 34–37 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  156. Pogorel'steva, T.P. (1952) [Parasites of fish in the northeastern part of the Black Sea.] Trudy Institutu Zoologii, Kiev, 8, 100–120 (In Ukrainian).Google Scholar
  157. Pogorel'tseva, T.P. (1959) Seasonal and age-linked variability in the parasite fauna of the Black Sea horse mackerel (Trachurus trachurus L.). Trudy Karadagskoi Biologicheskoi Stantsii, 15, 110–116 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  158. Radulescu, I.I., Nalbani, T.T. & Angelescu, N. (1972) Noi contributii la cunoasterea parazitofaunei pestilor din Oceanul Atlantic. Buletinul de Cercetari Piscicole, 31, 71–76.Google Scholar
  159. Rego, A.A. & Santos, C.P. (1983) Helmintofauna de cavalas, Scomber japonicus Houtt, do Rio de Janeiro. Memorias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, 78, 443–448.Google Scholar
  160. Rego, A.A., Carvalho-Varela, M., Medonça, M.M. & Afonso-Roque, M.M. (1985) Helminthofauna da sarda (Scomber scombrus L.) peixe da costa continental Portuguesa. Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, 80, 97–100.Google Scholar
  161. Reimer, L.W. (1984) Investigations of shallow and deepwater prawns and fishes on parasites and a short note on biomass of plankton of the coast of the P.R. of Mozambique. Fischerei-Forschung Wissenschaftliche Schriftenreihe, 22, 27–35.Google Scholar
  162. Reimer, L.W., Berger, C., Heuer, B., Lainka, H., Rosenthal, I. & Scharnweber, I. (1971) On the distribution of larvae of helminths in planctonic animals of the North Sea. Parazitologiya, 5, 542–550 (In Russian: English translation Parasitology, Riverdale, 1, 580–588).Google Scholar
  163. Rodrigues, H. de O., Varela, M.C., Rodrigues, S.S. & Cristofaro, R. (1972) Alguns trematódeos digenéticos de peixes do Oceano Atlântico. — Costa Continental Portuguêsa e Costa Continental de África. Atas da Sociedade de Biologia do Rio de Janeiro, 15, 87–93.Google Scholar
  164. Rohde, K. (1980) Host specificity indices of parasites and their application. Experientia, 36, 1369–1371.Google Scholar
  165. Ronald, K. (1959) A check list of the metazoan parasites of the Heterosomata. Quebec: Department of Fishes, Province of Quebec (Contribution no. 67), 152 pp.Google Scholar
  166. Saad-Fares, A. (1985) Trématodes de poissons des cotes du Liban. Spécificité. transmission et approche populationnelle. Thesis: Université des Sciences et Techniques du Languedoc, 435 pp.Google Scholar
  167. Sekerak, A.D. & Arai, H.P. (1973) Helminths of Sebastes alutus (Pisces: Teleostei) from the northeastern Pacific. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 51, 475–477.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  168. Sekerak, A.D. & Arai, H.P. (1977) Some metazoan parasites of rockfishes of the genus Sebastes from the northeastern Pacific Ocean. Syesis, 10, 139–144.Google Scholar
  169. Sey, O. (1967) Szívófégek a Budapesti Állatkertben tartott adriai halakból. Állatani Közleménvek, 54, 135–138.Google Scholar
  170. Sey, O. (1968) Parasitic helminths occurring in Adriatic fishes. Part 1. (Flukes). Acta Adriatica, 13(4), 1–15.Google Scholar
  171. Sey, O. (1970) Parasitic helminths occurring in Adriatic fishes. Part II. (Flukes and tapeworms). Acta Adriatica, 8, 3–15.Google Scholar
  172. Sezen-Akandere, Y. (1972) Istavrit baliklarindan elde edilen üç yeni Lepidapedon türü. Acta Biologica Turcica, 22, 89–94.Google Scholar
  173. Shandikov, G.A. & Parukhin, A.M. (1987) Population structure of nototheniops, Nototheniops tchizh, of the Ob' and Lena Banks (the Indian-Ocean Center of the Antarctic Ocean). Voprosy Ikhtiologii, (4), 558–568 (In Russian: English translation Journal of Ichthyology, 27(5), 70–80).Google Scholar
  174. Shimazu, T. (1986) Lepocreadium misakiense sp. n. and Neopechona olssoni (Yamaguti, 1934), comb. n. (Trematoda: Lepocreadiidae), parasites of a Japanese marine fish, Scomber japonicus. Zoological Science, 3, 569–571.Google Scholar
  175. Shimazu, T. & Nagasawa, K. (1985) Trematodes of marine fishes from Morooso Bay, Misaki, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. Journal of Nagano-ken Junior College, 40, 7–15.Google Scholar
  176. Shotter, R.A. (1972) Notes on helminth parasites of the whiting Odontogadus m. merlangus (L.) from the northern Irish Sea. Journal of Fish Biology, 4, 117–130.Google Scholar
  177. Shotter, R.A. (1973a) A comparison of the parasite fauna of young whiting, Odontogadus merlangus (L.) (Gadidae) from an inshore and an offshore location off the Isle of Man. Journal of Fish Biology, 5, 185–195.Google Scholar
  178. Shotter, R.A. (1973b) Changes in the parasite fauna of whiting Odontogadus merlangus L. with age and sex of host, season, and from different areas in the vicinity of the Isle of Man. Journal of Fish Biology, 5, 559–573.Google Scholar
  179. Shotter, R.A. (1976) The distribution of some helminth and copepod parasites in tissues of whiting, Merlangius merlangus L., from Manx waters. Journal of Fish Biology, 8, 101–117.Google Scholar
  180. Siddiqi, A.H. & Cable, R.M. (1960) Digenetic trematodes of marine fishes of Puerto Rico. Scientific Survey of Porto Rico and the Virgin Islands, 17, 257–368.Google Scholar
  181. Skrjabin, K.I. & Koval, V.P. (1960) Suborder Allocreadiata Skrjabin, Petrov and Koval, 1958. Part two. Superfamily Lepocreadioidea Cable, 1956. Trematody Zhivotnykh I Cheloveka. Osnovy Trematodology, 18, 13–377 (In Russian: English translation (1965) Israel Program for Scientific Translations, Cat. No. 1426, 7–272).Google Scholar
  182. Sogandares-Bernal, F. & Hutton, R.F. (1960) The status of some marine species of Lepocreadium Stossich, 1904 (Trematoda: Lepocreadiidae) from the North American Atlantic. In: Libro Homenaje al Doctor Eduardo Caballero y Caballero, Mexico: Secretaria de Education Publica, 275–283.Google Scholar
  183. Solonchenko, A.I. (1966) [On some studies of the helminth fauna of the Spanish mackerel Scomber colias G., inhabiting the South Atlantic.] In: [Questions of Marine Biology. Essays for the Symposium of Young Scientists, Sevastopol, 1966]. Kiev: Naukova Dumka, 120–121 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  184. Solonchenko, A.I. (1968) Parasitofauna of mackerel Scomber colias Gmelin inhabiting the Atlantic Ocean near the southwestern coast of Africa. Biologiya Morya, Kiev, 14, 90–95 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  185. Solonchenko, A.I. (1976) [Helminth fauna of fish from the Azov Sea in the region of Primorsko-Akhtarska.] Biologiya Morya, Kiev, 39, 92–104 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  186. Solonchenko, A.I. (1982) [Helminth fauna of Azov Sea fishes.] Kiev: Naukova Dumka, 150 pp. (In Russian).Google Scholar
  187. Stossich, M. (1886) I distomi dei pesci marini e d'acqua dolce. Lavoro monografico. Programma del Ginnasio Comunale Superiore di Trieste. dell'anno 1886, 1–66.Google Scholar
  188. Stossich, M. (1887) Brani di elmintologia Tergestina. Serie quarta. Bolletino della Società Adriatica di Scienze naturali in Trieste, 10, 90–96.Google Scholar
  189. Stossich, M. (1888) Appendice al lavoro “I distomi dei pesci marini e d'acqua dolce”. Programma del Ginnasio Communale Superiore di Trieste. dell'anno 35. 1887–8, 95–105.Google Scholar
  190. Strelkov, J.A. (1960) Endoparasitic worms of marine fishes of East Kamchatka. Trudy Zoologicheskogo Instituta. Leninorad, 28, 147–196 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  191. Stunkard, H.W. (1932) some larval trematodes from the coast in the region of Roscoff, Finistère. Parasitology, 24, 321–343.Google Scholar
  192. Stunkard, H.W. (1967) The life-cycle and developmental stages of a digenetic trematode whose unencysted metacercarial stages occur in medusae. Biological Bulletin. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, 133, 488.Google Scholar
  193. Stunkard, H.W. (1968) Studies on the life-history of Distomum pyriforme Linton, 1900. Biological Bulletin. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, 135, 439.Google Scholar
  194. Stunkard, H.W. (1969) The morphology and life-history of Neopechona pyriforme (Linton, 1900) n.gen., n. comb. (Trematoda: Lepocreadiidae). Biological Bulletin. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, 136, 96–113.Google Scholar
  195. Stunkard, H.W. (1970) The marine cercariae of the Woods Hole Massachusetts region. Biological Bulletin. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, 138, 66–76.Google Scholar
  196. Stunkard, H.W. (1974) New intermediate hosts of the digenetic trematodes, Monorcheides cumingiae Martin (1938) and Neopechona pyriforme (Linton, 1900). Journal of Parasitology, 60, 859.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  197. Stunkard, H.W. (1980) Successive hosts and developmental stages in the life history of Neopechona cablei sp. n. (Trematoda: Lepocreadiidae). Journal of Parasitology, 66, 636–641.Google Scholar
  198. Stunkard, H.W. (1983) The marine cercariae of the Woods Hole, Massachusetts region. A review and a revision. Biological Bulletin. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, 164, 143–162.Google Scholar
  199. Thomas, J.D. (1960) Trematodes of Ghanaian sub-littoral fishes. II. The family Lepocreadiidae Nicoll, 1935, sensu Cable & Hunninen, 1942. In: Libro Homenaje al Dr. Eduardo Caballero y Caballero. Mexico: Secretaria de Educacion Publica, 321–328.Google Scholar
  200. Timon-David, J. (1937) Etude sur les trématodes parasites des poissons du golfe de Marseille (Première liste). Bulletin de I'Institut Oceanographique. Monaco, 717, 1–24.Google Scholar
  201. Travassos, L., Freitas, J.F.T.de & Bührnheim, P.F. (1965a) Trematódeos de peixes do litoral capixaba: Acanthocolpoides pauloi gen. n., sp. n., parasito de cavalhina. Atas da Sociedade de Biologia do Rio de Janeiro, 9, 57–60.Google Scholar
  202. Travassos, L., Freitas, J.F.T.de & Bührnheim, P.F. (1965b) Trematödeos de peixes do litoral capixaba: Acanthocolpoides walteri sp. n., parasita de vento leste. Atas da Sociedade de Biologia do Rio de Janeiro, 9, 79–81.Google Scholar
  203. Travassos, L., Freitas, J.F.T.de & Bührnheim, P.F. (1967) Relatorio da excursâo do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz ao Estado do Espírito Santo em Novembro de 1964. Boletim do Museo de Biologia Prof. Mello Leitào, 31, 1–54.Google Scholar
  204. Vlasenko, P. (1931) Zur Helminthofauna der Schwarzmeerfische. Trudy Karadah'skovi Nauchnoyi Stantsiyi T.I. Vyazems'koho, 4, 88–136 (In Russian and German).Google Scholar
  205. Wallet, M. & Kohn, A. (1987) Trématodes parasites de poissons marins du littoral de Rio de Janeiro, Brésil. Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, 82, 21–27.Google Scholar
  206. Wang, P.-q. (1982) Some digenetic trematodes of marine fishes from Fujian Province, China. Oceanologia et Limnologia Sinica, 13, 179–194 (In Chinese).Google Scholar
  207. Ward, H.B. & Fillingham, J. (1934) A new trematode in a toadfish from southeastern Alaska. Proceedings of the Helminthological Society of Washington, 1, 25–31.Google Scholar
  208. Williams, H.H. (1960) A list of parasitic worms, including 22 new records, from marine fishes caught off the British Isles. Annals and Magazine of Natural History (Series 13), 2, 705–715.Google Scholar
  209. Yamaguti, S. (1934) Studies on the helminth fauna of Japan. Part 2. Trematodes of fishes. I. Japanese Journal of Zoology, 5, 249–541.Google Scholar
  210. Yamaguti, S. (1938) Studies on the helminth fauna of Japan. Part 21. Trematodes of fishes. IV. Kyôto: S. Yamaguti, 139 pp.Google Scholar
  211. Yamaguti, S. (1939) Studies on the helminth fauna of Japan. Part 26. Trematodes of fishes. VI. Japanese Journal of Zoology, 8, 211–230.Google Scholar
  212. Yamaguti, S. (1940) Studies on the helminth fauna of Japan. Part 31. Trematodes of fishes, VII. Japanese Journal of Zoology, 9, 35–108.Google Scholar
  213. Yamaguti, S. (1953) Parasitic worms mainly from Celebes. Part 3. Digenetic trematodes of fishes. II. Acta Medicinae Okayama, 8, 257–295.Google Scholar
  214. Yamaguti, S. (1959) Studies on the helminth fauna of Japan. Part 54. Trematodes of fishes, XIII. Publications of the Seto Marine Biological Laboratory, 7, 241–262.Google Scholar
  215. Yamaguti, S. (1970) The digenetic trematodes of Hawaiian fishes, Tokyo: Keigaku Publishing Company, 436 pp.Google Scholar
  216. Yamaguti, S. (1971) Synopsis of digenetic trematodes of vertebrates. Tokyo: Keigaku Publishing Company, Vol. 1, 1074 pp; Vol. 2, 349 plates.Google Scholar
  217. Yip, S.Y. (1984) Parasites of Pleurobrachia pileus Müller, 1776 (Ctenophora), from Galway Bay, western Ireland. Journal of Plankton Research, 6, 107–121.Google Scholar
  218. Zdzitowiecki, K. (in press) Six less known and new Antarctic digenetic species of the genera Neolepidapedon and Lepidapedon (Lepocreadiidae). Acta Parasitologica Polonica.Google Scholar
  219. Zhukov, E.V. (1960) Endoparasitic worms of the fishes in the Sea of Japan and South-Kuril shallow-waters. Trudy Zoologicheskogo Instituta, Leningrad, 28, 3–146 (In Russian).Google Scholar
  220. Zhukov, E.V. (1977) Contribution to the knowledge of trematodes of marine fishes of India. Parazitologicheskii Sbornik, 27, 51–79 (In Russian).Google Scholar

Copyright information

© Kluwer Academic Publishers 1990

Authors and Affiliations

  • Rodney A. Bray
    • 1
  • David I. Gibson
    • 1
  1. 1.Department of ZoologyBritish Museum (Natural History)LondonUK

Personalised recommendations