Rhipidocotyle
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Rhipidocotyle
Bucephalidae is a family of trematodes that parasitize fish. They lack suckers, having instead a muscular organ called a "rhynchus" at the front end which they use to attach to their hosts. The characteristics of the rhynchus are used to help define the genera of the family.Hassanine, R. M. E. (2002)On three digenean trematodes (Family Bucephalidae) from marine teleost fishes with new record from the Red Sea.''Egyptian Journal of Aquatic Biology and Fisheries'', 6(3), 1–16. It is one of the largest digenean families, with 25 genera containing hundreds of described species.Muñoz, G. & Bott, N. J. (2011)A new species of ''Prosorhynchoides'' (Trematoda, Bucephalidae) from the intertidal rocky zone of central Chile. ''Acta Parasitologica'', 56(2), 140–146. Bucephalids are cosmopolitan, having been recorded all over the world. They are parasites of fish from freshwater, marine, and brackish water habitat types. The name ''Bucephalus'', meaning "ox head", was originally applied to ...
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Dolichoenterum
Bucephalidae is a family of trematodes that parasitize fish. They lack suckers, having instead a muscular organ called a "rhynchus" at the front end which they use to attach to their hosts. The characteristics of the rhynchus are used to help define the genera of the family.Hassanine, R. M. E. (2002)On three digenean trematodes (Family Bucephalidae) from marine teleost fishes with new record from the Red Sea.''Egyptian Journal of Aquatic Biology and Fisheries'', 6(3), 1–16. It is one of the largest digenean families, with 25 genera containing hundreds of described species.Muñoz, G. & Bott, N. J. (2011)A new species of ''Prosorhynchoides'' (Trematoda, Bucephalidae) from the intertidal rocky zone of central Chile. ''Acta Parasitologica'', 56(2), 140–146. Bucephalids are cosmopolitan, having been recorded all over the world. They are parasites of fish from freshwater, marine, and brackish water habitat types. The name ''Bucephalus'', meaning "ox head", was originally applied to ...
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Rhipidocotyle
Bucephalidae is a family of trematodes that parasitize fish. They lack suckers, having instead a muscular organ called a "rhynchus" at the front end which they use to attach to their hosts. The characteristics of the rhynchus are used to help define the genera of the family.Hassanine, R. M. E. (2002)On three digenean trematodes (Family Bucephalidae) from marine teleost fishes with new record from the Red Sea.''Egyptian Journal of Aquatic Biology and Fisheries'', 6(3), 1–16. It is one of the largest digenean families, with 25 genera containing hundreds of described species.Muñoz, G. & Bott, N. J. (2011)A new species of ''Prosorhynchoides'' (Trematoda, Bucephalidae) from the intertidal rocky zone of central Chile. ''Acta Parasitologica'', 56(2), 140–146. Bucephalids are cosmopolitan, having been recorded all over the world. They are parasites of fish from freshwater, marine, and brackish water habitat types. The name ''Bucephalus'', meaning "ox head", was originally applied to ...
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Prosorhynchoides
Bucephalidae is a family of trematodes that parasitize fish. They lack suckers, having instead a muscular organ called a "rhynchus" at the front end which they use to attach to their hosts. The characteristics of the rhynchus are used to help define the genera of the family.Hassanine, R. M. E. (2002)On three digenean trematodes (Family Bucephalidae) from marine teleost fishes with new record from the Red Sea.''Egyptian Journal of Aquatic Biology and Fisheries'', 6(3), 1–16. It is one of the largest digenean families, with 25 genera containing hundreds of described species.Muñoz, G. & Bott, N. J. (2011)A new species of ''Prosorhynchoides'' (Trematoda, Bucephalidae) from the intertidal rocky zone of central Chile. ''Acta Parasitologica'', 56(2), 140–146. Bucephalids are cosmopolitan, having been recorded all over the world. They are parasites of fish from freshwater, marine, and brackish water habitat types. The name ''Bucephalus'', meaning "ox head", was originally applied to ...
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Bucephalus Polymorphus
''Bucephalus polymorphus'' is a type of flatworm. This species is within the Bucephalidae family of Digenea, which in turn is a subclass of Trematodes within the phylum Platyhelminthes (i.e. flatworm). It is characterized by having a mouth near the middle of its body, along with a sac-like gut. The mouth opening is located in the centre of the ventral surface. This is a specific body type of cecaria known as a gastrostome. The adults occur in the gut of marine and fresh-water fish. The metacercariae encyst in smaller fish, sometimes in the nervous system. These parasitic flatworms are dorso-ventrally flattened animals characterized by a bilaterally symmetrical body enclosed within a syncytial tegument. They have a distal, anucleate later (distal cytoplasm). The distal cytoplasm contains vesicular inclusions that are Golgi derived. The adults of these acoelomate worms are common in the digestive tract, but are also found in other organs of vertebrates. The adult parasite attaches ...
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Satyu Yamaguti
was a Japanese parasitologist, entomologist, and helminthologist. He was a specialist of mosquitoes and helminths such as digeneans, monogeneans, cestodes, acanthocephalans and nematodes. He also worked on the parasitic crustaceans Copepoda and Branchiura. Satyu Yamaguti wrote more than 60 scientific papersAnonymous. 1983. Special edition: A list of papers by Dr. Satyu Yamaguti and his collaborators and a notice on their distribution. The Meguro Parasitological Museum News, 153 (58), 1-12PDF and, more importantly, several huge monographs which are still in use by scientists all over the world and were cited over 1,000 times each. Education and career Satyu Yamaguti was born in Nagano Prefecture, Japan, 21 April 1894. He graduated from Okayama Medical College (1918), studied pathology at Tokyo University (1918-1925) and parasitology at the Institut für Tropenkrankheiten in Hamburg, Germany (1925-1926). He received his MD from Tokyo University in 1926 and was Dr. Sc. of Kyoto Uni ...
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Karl Moriz Diesing
Karl (Carl) Moriz (Moritz) Diesing (16 June 1800, in Krakow – 10 January 1867, in Vienna) was an Austrian naturalist and zoologist, specializing in the study of helminthology. He studied medicine at the University of Vienna, earning his doctorate in 1826. Afterwards, he served as an assistant to botanist Nikolaus Joseph von Jacquin, later working as an intern at the ''Hof-Naturalien-Cabinet'' (from 1829). In 1836 he became a curator of the zoological collections. In the late 1840s, he began to suffer from serious eye problems, and shortly afterwards experienced permanent blindness. His principal works include ''Systema Helminthum'' (2 vols., 1850–1851), and ''Revision der Nematoden'' (1861). In his paper "''Versuch einer monographie der Gattung Pentastoma''" (Ann. Wien Mus. Naturges. 1836, 1–32), he was the first to establish the distinct nature of the Pentastomida, placing them in a new group which he called Acanthotheca. The genera ''Diesingia'' and ''Diesingiella'' < ...
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