TL;DR: In this article, experiments were carried out to determine whether cross-fertilization, multiple insemination and sperm sharing occur in Bulinus cernicus, and the results showed that the majority of snails (70%) switched rapidly to cross fertilization after pairing.
Abstract: Experiments have been carried out to determine whether cross–fertilization, multiple insemination and sperm sharing occur in Bulinus cernicus. Snails collected from Canal La Paix, Mauritius, were found to be polymorphic for glucose phosphate isomerase, and from this stock three snail colonies homozygous for GPI 2/2, GPI4/4 and GPI6/6 were selected. Thus, three markers were available to monitor cross–fertilization. Isolated snails produced egg–masses by self–fertilization 40 days post–hatching. Egg–masses produced by self–fertilizing individuals tended to be smaller than those from cross–fertilizing snails, 367 eggs per egg–mass as opposed to 5–34. The majority of snails (70%) switched rapidly to cross–fertilization after pairing. Multiple insemination by two partners was common, heterozygous progeny were produced in a random manner and did not reflect the sequence of mating. No evidence of sperm sharing was found, snails were found to be capable of passing on their own sperm while still producing eggs fertilized by sperm received from an earlier mating. Differences in mating behaviour were noted between snails representing the homozygous GPI colonies, with snails from one colony adopting the female role more readily than those from the other two, which predominantly mated as males.
TL;DR: The infectivity of Echinostoma friedi was studied experimentally in a range of laboratory-reared snails that coexist in the same natural locality, finding six species of snails found to be susceptible.
Abstract: The infectivity of Echinostoma friedi (Trematoda: Echinostomatidae) miracidia was studied experimentally in a range of laboratory-reared snails that coexist in the same natural locality, namely Radix peregra, Lymnaea fuscus, L. truncatula (Lymnaeidae), Gyraulus chinensis, Helisoma duryi (Planorbidae) and Physella acuta (Physidae), and snails from different geographical origins acting naturally or experimentally as intermediate hosts of Schistosoma spp., namely Planorbarius metidjensis (from Malaga, Spain), Biomphalaria glabrata (Guadeloupe), B. alexandrina (Egypt) (Planorbidae), Bulinus cernicus (Mauritius), B. globosus (Zambia), B. natalensis (South Africa) and B. truncatus (Niger) (Bulinidae). Six species of snails were found to be susceptible, with the rate of infection ranging from 0 to 36.7%. The highest infection was detected in R. peregra. The low host specificity of E. friedi might have an epidemiological significance as a requisite for a recent establishment in a new geographical area.
TL;DR: The results demonstrate the potential of DNA probes for the identification and characterisation of intermediate hosts of schistosomes and show different specificities to species representing the four species groups of Bulinus.
TL;DR: A comparison of data sets for 1980 and 1986 revealed the allelic frequencies at five enzyme loci to be remarkably consistent.
Abstract: Enzyme variation has been investigated in eight populations of Bulinus cernicus from Mauritius using isoelectric focusing and starch gel electrophoresis. Of 11 loci examined for 10 enzyme systems, seven were found to be polymorphic. These were malate dehydrogenase, glucose phosphate isomerase, acid phosphatase (A and B), 3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase and NADH-dependent diaphorase. Invariant loci were phosphoglucomutase, xanthine oxidase, fructokinase and αaL-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase. The percentage of polymorphic loci within the populations ranged from 9.1% to 54.5%. The average heterozygosity per population for all loci ranged from 0,009 to 0.203. Genetic distance values ranged from 0.01 to 0.3 with the higher values associated with comparisons of populations from the north-west and south-east of the island. A comparison of data sets for 1980 and 1986 revealed the allelic frequencies at five enzyme loci to be remarkably consistent.