Prosthogonimus macrorchis adults perceive tactile stimuli using tangoreceptors. Chemoreceptors and light receptors are needed less in the adult stage than in the larval stages, because the larval stages need them to locate their hosts. Chematotactic cues, used used in the larval stage, are sensed by their chemoreceptors to find their snail host. There are no studies on other communication of P. macrorchis.
Communication Channels: tactile ; chemical
Perception Channels: tactile ; chemical
This species does not have any conservation status.
US Federal List: no special status
CITES: no special status
State of Michigan List: no special status
Prosthogonimus macrorchis embryos, known as miracidia larvae, are released into the water column by the definitive host. Hatching occurs in the first intermediate host, snails. Miracidia larvae travel through the digestive tract of the first intermediate host and burrow through the intestinal wall. Larvae then transform into sporocysts, at which time they lose cilia. Daughter sporocysts have been found in snail digestive glands, but mother sporocysts, which use asexual reproduction to produce more daughter sporocysts, have not been found. Cercariae are released from the daughter sporocyst. The snail intermediate host will release tailed cercariae into the water through the feces. Currents made by respiration of a dragon fly naiad cause cercariae to enter its rectal chamber, and it becomes the second intermediate host. The cercariae then become encysted metacercariae. Transmission to the ultimate host occurs when fowl consume infected dragonflies. Metacercariae are released into the digestive tract as the infected insects are digested. Conditions in the digestive tract of the ultimate host allow for the metacercariae to become excysted. As metacercariae mature into the adult phase, they migrate to the oviduct of the ultimate host, where reproduction occurs.
Development - Life Cycle: metamorphosis
When the intermediate hosts come in contact with Prosthogonimus macrorchis, they become infected, but it is the definitive host that shows signs of real damage. The parasite can be found within the bird’s bursa of Fabricius, the oviduct, or the hindgut. There, Prosthogonimus macrorchis causes damage to the bird’s organs or even rupture the oviduct. This results in chickens laying eggs without a shell, or even the prevention of their eggs being laid.
Negative Impacts: causes or carries domestic animal disease
There are no known positive effects of Prosthogonimus macrorchis on humans.
Prosthogonimus macrorchis is an endoparasite, found intercellularly within an organism. It can be found in the Great Lakes area, inside Amnicola snails and dragonflies, its two intermediate hosts. The definitive hosts of P. macrorchis are chickens (Galliformes), ducks (Anseriformes), and wild birds (Passeriformes).
Ecosystem Impact: parasite
Species Used as Host:
Both the intermediate and definitive hosts of Prosthogonimus macrorchis give the parasite its ability to live, because it feeds off of its hosts’ body fluids.
Animal Foods: body fluids
Primary Diet: carnivore (Eats body fluids)
Prosthogonimus macrorchis is an avian parasite found in regions of the United States and Canada near the Great Lakes. Prosthogonimus macrorchis is known for causing a reduction or termination in egg production in domestic fowl.
Biogeographic Regions: nearctic
Prosthogonimus macrorchis inhabits areas surrounding the Great Lakes, mainly aquatic environments. Eggs are expelled from the ultimate avian host through the anus and into freshwater at the surface of the water column. The first intermediate host, typically a snail, consumes eggs that sink to the bottom of the water column. Adults live in the oviducts of avian species such as ducks, chickens, sparrows, and crows that become infected by consuming infected insects. The oviduct environment is most suitable during reproduction.
Habitat Regions: temperate ; freshwater
Aquatic Biomes: lakes and ponds
The total lifespan of Prosthogonimus macrorchis is about 80 to 115 days in chickens and about 125 days in ducks. The metacercariae stage is reached after the first 70 days of this period. Metacercariae become adults after about one week in the ultimate host in chickens and three weeks in ducks.
Average lifespan
Status: wild: 115 days.
The adult body of Prosthogonimus macrorchis is flat and transparent with spines on the cuticle, a body plan typical of trematodes. An adult is about 8 mm long and 5 mm wide, and the posterior end appears broader than the anterior end. The ventral sucker is about 2 mm away from the anterior end of the body, and another smaller sucker is at the anterior end. The pharynx lies beneath the anterior sucker, and is connected to the esophagus, which leads into the intestine. The intestine consists of two lobes that are positioned laterally on each side of the body. The uterus occupies about half of the body at the posterior end. Two large testes lie about halfway between the ventral sucker and the posterior end of the body. The ovary contains multiple lobes and is between the ventral sucker and the testes. A genital pore is adjacent to the anterior sucker. Vitelline ducts appear on the left and right sides of the body, connected to the ovary by the vitelline gland.
Range length: 7 to 9 mm.
Other Physical Features: ectothermic ; heterothermic ; bilateral symmetry
There are no known direct predators of Prosthogonimus macrorchis, although it is indirectly consumed by host organisms.
Individuals of Prosthogonimus macrorchis are monoecious and can self fertilize.
Prosthogonimus macrorchis tends to reproduce more in the spring and summer. Reproduction is not common in the winter, as few fowl species are available, and reproduction is not possible without the ultimate host. Also, if bodies of water are frozen, snails that inhabit benthic regions cannot obtain eggs. Oviducts of the ultimate hosts provide a suitable environment for adult P. macrorchis during the hosts’ breeding season, and facilitate P. macrorchis reproduction. Eggs are typically laid in the spring, and transfer to dragonfly naiads typically occurs during the summer. Asexual reproduction also occurs during the sporocyst stage of development.
Key reproductive features monoecious, digenetic Age at sexual or reproductive maturity 80 to 90 days
Breeding season: This species mainly reproduces in the spring.
Range age at sexual or reproductive maturity (female or asexual): 80 to 90 days.
Range age at sexual or reproductive maturity (male): 80 to 90 days.
Key Reproductive Features: seasonal breeding ; simultaneous hermaphrodite; sexual ; asexual
Beyond the limited provisioning of eggs, there is no parental investment.
Parental Investment: no parental involvement; pre-hatching/birth (Provisioning: Female)