Onchocerca tubingensis

Onchocerca tubingensis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Nematoda
Class: Secernentea
Order: Spirurida
Family: Onchocercidae
Genus: Onchocerca
Species: O. tubingensis
Binomial name
Onchocerca tubingensis
Bain & Schulz-Key, 1974

Onchocerca tubingensis is the name of a nematode.[1] It was 1974 discovered and published by O. Bain und H. Schulz-Key in Tropenmedizin und Parasitologie and named after Tübingen.[2] Red deer (Cervus elaphus) are the host of this parasite.[3] The adult worms of Onchocerca tubingensis are found in subcutaneous nodules on the caudal part of the back, while the microfilariae are distributed on the ventral part of the body with maximum densities in the region of the sternum and with lower densities on the inner sides of the hindlegs. The infection rates of 94 red deer investigated in southern Germany during 1907–1974 were 23%.[4]

Red deer are the host of Onchocerca tubingensis

References

Wikispecies has information related to: Onchocerca tubingensis
  1. The Free Dictionary
  2. H Schulz-Key, O Bain: A fourth species of Onchocerca, O. garmsi n.sp. from the European deer (author's transl)
  3. Schulz-Key, H; Bain, O (1976). "A fourth species of Onchocerca, O. Garmsi n.sp. From the European deer (author's transl)". Tropenmedizin und Parasitologie 27 (4): 474–8. PMID 1006803.
  4. Schulz-Key, H (1975). "Studies on the Filariidae of Cervidae in southern Germany. 2. Filariidae of the red deer (Cervus elaphus)". Tropenmedizin und Parasitologie 26 (3): 348–58. PMID 1189029.
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