Centers for Disease Control/Division of Parasitic Diseases and Malaria
EOL staff
Life cycle of Bertiella tapeworms The life cycle of Bertiella species is not completely understood. Bertiella are believed to have two-host life cycles, with an arthropod intermediate host (usually a mite, likely an oribatid mite) and a vertebrate definitive host (usually non-human primates for the species implicated in human infections). Bertiella studeri (which is found in Africa and Asia) usually infects monkeys in the genera Anthropithecus, Cercopithecus, Cynomologus, and Macaca. Bertiella mucronata (which is found in South America and Cuba) usually infects monkeys in the genera Callicebus and Alouatta. Bertiella eggs and proglottids are passed in the feces of the definitive host (1). Oncospheres (which contain the tapeworm larvae) are ingested by the arthropod intermediate host (2) and within this host the oncospheres develop into cysticercoid larvae (3). The definitive hosts become infected when they ingest arthropod intermediate hosts (4) infected with cysticercoids. Adult Bertiella reside in the small intestine of the definitive host (5), where they attach to the mucosa with the aid of an unarmed scolex (6) (the anterior end of a tapeworm's head). Humans can occasionally serve as definitive hosts for both B. studeri and B. mucronata, usually after accidentally ingesting infected mites (7).From Centers for Disease Control Parasites and Health website
Description: English: Blemishes on a tuber caused by silver scurf.Español: Manchas en la papa causadas por 'silver scurf'. Date: 23 November 2015, 17:59:42. Source: UW-Extension. Author: A.J. Gevens.
Description: English: Blemishes on a tuber caused by silver scurf/Manchas en la papa causadas por 'silver scurf'. Date: 23 November 2015, 18:00:41. Source: UW-Extension. Author: A.J. Gevens.
Tromso University Museum. Tromso University Museum. Tromso University Museum. Year: 2011. Contact: geir.mathiassen@uit.no.
Barcode of Life Data Systems
Tromso University Museum. Tromso University Museum. Tromso University Museum. Year: 2011. Contact: geir.mathiassen@uit.no.
Barcode of Life Data Systems