Elaeophora

Elaeophora is also a synonym for the plant genus Plukenetia.
Elaeophora
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Subkingdom: Eumetazoa
(unranked): Bilateria
Superphylum: Platyzoa
Phylum: Nematoda
Class: Secernentea
Subclass: Spiruria
Order: Spirurida
Superfamily: Filarioidea
Family: Onchocercidae
Genus: Elaeophora
Railliet & Henry 1912
Type species
Elaeophora poeli
(Vryburg 1879) Railliet and Henry 1912
Species

Elaeophora abramovi
Elaeophora bohmi
Elaeophora elaphi
Elaeophora linglingense
Elaeophora poeli
Elaeophora sagitta
Elaeophora schneideri

Elaeophora is a genus of parasitic nematodes which live attached to the interior surfaces of major arteries, veins and/or heart chambers in various large mammal hosts. Infestation with Elaeophora species is referred to as elaeophorosis. The species of Elaeophora have been found in Africa, Asia, Europe, and North America. Despite the fact that they produce aneurysms in the arteries and heart of their hosts which measure up to 2 cm in diameter, overt clinical symptoms of infestation are seldom reported, with the notable exception of E. schneideri infestation in sheep, elk, and moose.[1]

Taxonomy

The type species, Elaeophora poeli (Vryburg 1879) Railliet and Henry 1912, was first described as Filaria poeli in 1879. In 1912, the genus Elaeophora was created to distinguish this species from the other species of the genus Filaria.[2] Elaeophora was made the senior synonym of the genera Alcefilaria and Cordophilus in 1976.[3]

Species

General life cycle

Detailed life cycle studies have been reported for only one species of Elaeophora so far - E. schneideri. Microfilariae (not eggs) are shed by the adult female from her attachment site inside the lumen of the carotid artery of the definitive host. The microfilariae are carried through the blood stream and become lodged in the small capillaries of the skin in the head and facial areas. Blood-feeding horse flies ingest the microfilariae, which develop into infective larvae in the fly. The infective larvae enter a new definitive (mammal) host through the bite wound when the fly feeds again. The infective larvae migrate to secondary arterial sites, where they mature before migrating to the carotid artery. In the carotid artery, they mature into adults and reproduce sexually to produce microfilariae. It is assumed that the life cycles of other species of Elaeophora follow this general pattern.

References

  1. Pence, D.B. (1991) Elaeophorosis in wild ruminants. Bulletin of the Society for Vector Ecology 16(1):149-160.
  2. Railliet, A. and A. Henry (1912) Nématodes vasculicoles des Bovins annamites." Bulletin de la Société de Pathologie Exotique 5(2):115-118.
  3. Anderson, R.C. and O. Bain (1976) "CIH Keys to the Nematode Parasites of Vertebrates." Commonwealth Agriculture Bureaux: Farnham, England, Vol. 3, pp. 59-116.
  4. Cheng, Y.D. (1982) "A survey of parasitic nematodes in domestic animals and poultry from Lingling area, Hunan Province, with description of two new species." Acta Zootaxonomica Sinica 7(1):20-26. (not seen)
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