Fasciolidae
| Fasciolidae | |
|---|---|
|   | |
| Fasciola hepatica - adult worm | |
|  Scientific classification  | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia | 
| Phylum: | Platyhelminthes | 
| Class: | Trematoda | 
| Order: | Echinostomida | 
| Suborder: | Echinostomata | 
| Family: |  Fasciolidae Railliet 1895  | 
Fasciolidae is a family of trematodes and includes several veterinary and medical important parasites. Family Fasciolidae is divided into 5 genera. Flukes of the family are localized in liver, gall bladder, and the intestine. The life cycle of fasciolid flukes includes one intermediate host – freshwater snails from family Lymnaeidae.[1]
Morphological features
- length of adults: 2 (Parafasciolopsis) up to 10 cm (Fasciola gigantica, Fascioloides magna)
 - suckers: oral and ventral sucker are closely located [1]
 - cercariae: gymnocephalic shape [2]
 
Systematics within family
According to Olson et al. 2003 [3] the family has five genera:
- Fasciola
- F. hepatica – Common liver fluke
 - F. gigantica
 - F. jacksoni
 - Fasciola spp. – Japanese strain
 
 - Fascioloides
 - Fasciolopsis
 - Parafasciolopsis
- P. fasciolaemorpha
 
 - Protofasciola
- P. robusta
 
 
References
- 1 2 Jurášek, V., Dubinský, P., 1993. Veterinárna parazitológia. Príroda a.s., Bratislava, 382 pp.
 - ↑ Pybus, M.J., 2001. Liver flukes. In: Samuel, W.M., Pybus, M.J., Kocan, A.A. (eds.), Parasitic diseases in wild mammals, Iowa State Press, Iowa City, pp 121–149.
 - ↑ Olson, P.D., Cribb, T.H., Tkach, V.V., Bray, R.A., Littlewood, D.T.J., 2003. Phylogeny and classification of the Digenea (Platyhelminthes: Trematoda)1. Int. J. Parasitol. 22, 733-755.
 
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