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William Threlfall

Bio: William Threlfall is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Helminths & Larus. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 31 citations.

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TL;DR: A survey of the helminth fauna of herring gulls in northern Caernarvonshire and Anglesey during the period July 1962 to November 1964 found ‘Adult’ birds were generally found to be more heavily infected with helminths than the chicks, with the exception of the nematode Cyathostoma lari, which was found more frequently in the chicks.
Abstract: A survey was made of the helminth fauna of 657 herring gulls (474 ‘adults’ and 183 chicks) in northern Caernarvonshire and Anglesey during the period July 1962 to November 1964. A total of 31 species of helminths were identified (10 species of Trematoda, 11 of Cestoda and 10 of Nematoda), including 1 new species, four new host records and three new British records. Two species of Mallophaga were identified from the birds. In three cases (Gymnophallus deliciosus, Paricterotaenia porosa and Capillaria contorta) a significant difference was found in the burden carried by male and female birds. ‘Adult’ birds were generally found to be more heavily infected with helminths than the chicks, with the exception of the nematode Cyathostoma lari, which was found more frequently in the chicks. A new intermediate host for Capillaria contorta was noted, namely Eiseniella tetraedra.Three species of Trematoda, two of Cestoda, and two of Nematoda were found to be cyclic (seasonal) in their time of appearance. Tetrabothrius spp. appeared most frequently in winter, whilst Anomotaenia larina was found only during the summer months. C. lari showed a primary peak of appearance in summer, with a secondary peak in winter. Capillaria contorta appeared in high numbers throughout the year.The distribution of helminths within the birds was also examined. Gymnophallus deliciosus was generally found in the gall bladder, whilst Parorchis acanthus was found only in the rectum. Intestinal trematodes were normally found in the mid-third of the small intestine (e.g. Spelotrema excellens, Himasthla elongata). In the case of C. lingua, however, peak numbers were found in the duodenum, whilst Brachylaemus fuscatus was found most frequently in the posterior third of the small intestine. Cestodes appeared most frequently in the anterior or posterior thirds of the small intestine (e.g. Tetrabothrius spp., Anomotaenia micracantha). Hymenolepis cirrosa showed two peaks of infection along the length of the small intestine, a small one in the anterior third, a much larger one in the posterior third. Attempts were made to correlate the helminth burden found with the food eaten by the birds and the availability of intermediate hosts.I should like to thank Mr J. Hobart and Dr I. V. Herbert for all the help that they have given me in the preparation of this manuscript, and also the bodies that gave me permission to shoot birds on their land, particularly the Nature Conservancy. Finally, I would like to thank the S.R.C. for the grant that made this work possible.

32 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Examining helminth diversity in a series of hosts concludes that there are fundamental differences between the communities of helminths in fish and bird hosts and provides explanations for the observed differences.
Abstract: Recently, some authors (Kennedy, 1981; Price & Clancy, 1983) have argued that there are fundamental differences between the communities of helminths in fish and bird hosts. Such differences are foreshadowed by the work of Dogiel (1964) and are apparent from survey data (e.g. Threlfall, 1967; Bakke, 1972; Hair & Holmes, 1975 on birds, and compare Chubb, 1963; Mishra & Chubb, 1969; Wootten, 1973; Ingham & Dronen, 1980 on fish). Questions still remain, however, as to whether the distinctions are truly justified and whether the differences are really fundamental. In this paper, we address these questions by examining helminth diversity in a series of hosts. We then discuss and provide explanations for the observed differences.

262 citations

Book
01 Jan 1961

240 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A positive relationship between the number of helminth parasite species per host and host species geographic range in Holarctic waterfowl is described.
Abstract: Several papers have suggested that host species with larger geographic ranges tend to harbour a greater number of parasite species than those with smaller ranges. However, few of these investigations have dealt quantitatively with problems related to host sampling and/or phylogeny. This paper describes a positive relationship between the number of helminth parasite species per host and host species geographic range in Holarctic waterfowl. The analysis controls for the effects of differential sampling of host species and for the effects of taxonomic association. Neither host body size, population size, population density, nor social tendency correlate significantly with the number of parasite species per host corrected for number of hosts examined, and therefore association with these variables is unlikely to confound the relationship between parasites and host geo-

149 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Feb 2008-Ecology
TL;DR: Trematode prevalence appears to be predominantly determined by local site characteristics favoring high gull abundance, and formal analyses detected no regional spatial gradients in either trematode prevalence or independent environmental variables.
Abstract: Geographic variability in abundance can be driven by multiple physical and biological factors operating at multiple scales. To understand the determinants of larval trematode prevalence within populations of the marine snail host Littorina littorea, we quantified many physical and biological variables at 28 New England intertidal sites. A hierarchical, mixed-effects model identified the abundance of gulls (the final hosts and dispersive agents of infective trematode stages) and snail size (a proxy for time of exposure) as the primary factors associated with trematode prevalence. The predominant influence of these variables coupled with routinely low infection rates (21 of the 28 populations exhibited prevalence <12%) suggest broad-scale recruitment limitation of trematodes. Although infection rates were spatially variable, formal analyses detected no regional spatial gradients in either trematode prevalence or independent environmental variables. Trematode prevalence appears to be predominantly determined by local site characteristics favoring high gull abundance.

120 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 1981-Ardea
TL;DR: The method of localization of Macoma, the consequences the way of localization has for the sizes of Macomas that are taken, the way Macoma is opened and the role Macoma plays as bulk food for Oystercatchers are described.
Abstract: The Oystercatcher is a specialised feeder on bivalves in estuarine areas. Among the different prey specics taken Macoma can be considered to be an important one. In this study some relations between Oystercatchers and this prey are described: the method of localization of Macoma, the consequences the way of localization has for the sizes of Macoma that are taken (selection for size), the way Macoma is opened and the role Macoma plays as bulk food for Oystercatchers. ... Zie Summary

104 citations