giant liver fluke - definição. O que é giant liver fluke. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é giant liver fluke - definição

SPECIES OF WORM
Giant Liver Fluke; F. magna

Fascioloides magna         
Fascioloides magna, also known as giant liver fluke, large American liver fluke or deer fluke, is trematode parasite that occurs in wild and domestic ruminants in North America and Europe. Adult flukes occur in the liver of the definitive host and feed on blood.
Distoma         
  • Egg of ''Dicrocoelium'' sp.
GROUP OF LIVER PARASITES
Liver Fluke; Fascioloidiasis; Liver flukes; Distoma
·noun A genus of parasitic, trematode worms, having two suckers for attaching themselves to the part they infest. ·see 1st Fluke, 2.
liver fluke         
  • Egg of ''Dicrocoelium'' sp.
GROUP OF LIVER PARASITES
Liver Fluke; Fascioloidiasis; Liver flukes; Distoma
¦ noun a fluke of which the adult lives in the liver of a vertebrate and the larva in a secondary host such as a snail or fish. [Fasciola hepatica and other species.]

Wikipédia

Fascioloides magna

Fascioloides magna, also known as giant liver fluke, large American liver fluke or deer fluke, is trematode parasite that occurs in wild and domestic ruminants in North America and Europe. Adult flukes occur in the liver of the definitive host and feed on blood. Mature flukes measure 4 to 10 centimetres (1+12 to 4 in) in length × 2 to 3.5 centimetres (34 to 1+38 in) in width, and have an oval dorso-ventrally flattened body with oral and ventral sucker. The flukes are reddish-brown in colour and are covered by tegument. As with other digenean trematodes, the life cycle includes intramolluscan phase in snails. The parasite is currently distributed in wild ruminants in North America and Europe, including Austria, Canada, the Czech Republic, Croatia, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Serbia, Slovakia, and the United States.