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  2. Trematode life cycle stages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trematode_life_cycle_stages

    The life cycle of a typical trematode begins with an egg. Some trematode eggs hatch directly in the environment (water), while others are eaten and hatched within a host, typically a mollusc. The hatchling is called a miracidium, a free-swimming, ciliated larva. Miracidia will then grow and develop within the intermediate host into a sac-like ...

  3. Mansonella perstans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mansonella_perstans

    The complete cycle takes 2–6 wk, and is dependent on environmental conditions. The females usually bite around dawn and dusk, although often at other times. Eggs are laid 3–4 d after the blood meal, and about 70-180 eggs are laid each time. Moisture is essential for the vector, and the development of its eggs and larvae.

  4. Schistosoma haematobium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schistosoma_haematobium

    Life cycle of S. haematobium. S. haematobium completes its life cycle in humans, as definitive hosts, and freshwater snails, as intermediate hosts, just like other schistosomes. But unlike other schistosomes that release eggs in the intestine, it releases its eggs in the urinary tract, which are excreted along with the urine. [15]

  5. Cooperia oncophora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooperia_oncophora

    C. oncophora has a direct life cycle. Infective larvae are ingested by the host. The larvae grow to adults, which reproduce in the small intestines. Eggs are shed onto the pasture with the faeces, which leads to new infections. Co-infections with other gastro-intestinal nematodes such as O. ostertagi and H. contortus are common. [2]

  6. Dioctophyme renale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dioctophyme_renale

    Life cycle of Dioctophyme renale. Adult Dioctophyme renale inhabit the kidney (typically the right kidney). [2] [6] Females produce eggs which are passed in urine. In aquatic environments, eggs embryonate after 15–100 days. [4] These eggs are ingested by an aquatic oligochaete, hatch, penetrate blood vessels, and develop into a stage three ...

  7. Microfilaria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microfilaria

    The microfilaria (plural microfilariae, sometimes abbreviated mf) is an early stage in the life cycle of certain parasitic nematodes in the family Onchocercidae. [1] In these species, the adults live in a tissue or the circulatory system of vertebrates (the "definitive hosts"). They release microfilariae into the bloodstream of the vertebrate host.

  8. Anisakis simplex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anisakis_simplex

    The egg then hatches, and second stage larvae emerge into the sea enclosed in a protective sheath. [4] Anisakis simplex lodged in the liver of a cod fish. The temperature of the water affects the speed of hatching of the eggs. In warmer temperatures, eggs take between 4 and 8 days to hatch, but in temperatures below 5 °C, it may take up to 82 ...

  9. Anisakis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anisakis

    The life cycle is completed when an infected fish is eaten by a marine mammal, such as a whale, seal, sea lion, dolphin or another animal like a seabird or shark. The nematode excysts in the intestine, feeds, grows, mates, and releases eggs into the seawater in the host's feces.