Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4558697 | Journal of Invertebrate Pathology | 2008 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Coptotermes gestroi is an exotic species of termite that is a pest of great economical importance in Brazil. This paper relates the occurrence of a coelomic gregarine (Apicomplexa: Neogregarinida) in the abdomen of the foraging workers recently collected from field colonies of this termite. The termite hosts presented large, white abdomens because they carried 1 up to 3 cysts of gregarines filled with numerous lemon-shaped spores. Earlier developmental stages of this gregarine were not observed in the scanning microscope preparations nor in the histological slides of the infected termites. However, the lemon-shaped spores suggest a parasite gregarine of Mattesia genus, family Lipotrophidae.
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Authors
Ana Maria Costa-Leonardo, Fabiana E. Casarin, Joice P. Constantini,