Trichuridae
Appearance
Trichuridae | |
---|---|
Trichuris egg in stool sample (40x) | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Nematoda |
Class: | Enoplea |
Order: | Trichocephalida |
Family: | Trichuridae Ransom, 1911 |
Genera | |
6, see text |
The roundworm family Trichuridae includes the type genus Trichuris and some less widely known members. They are (after the abolishment of the artificial "Adenophorea" assemblage) placed in subclass Dorylaimia of the class Enoplea; however, the former might be better treated as a class in its own right. That nonwithstanding, their order (Trichocephalida) has been known under alternate names in the past, namely Trichiurida.
The genus Trichuris is particularly well known for being a common parasite of domestic animals and less usually humans. Its common name "whipworm" refers to the shape of these worms; they look like whips with wider "handles" at the posterior end.
The genera of Trichuridae are:[1]
- Capillostrongyloides Freitas & Lent, 1935
- Liniscus
- Orthothominx Teixeira de Freitas & Jorge da Silva, 1960
- Pearsonema Teixeira de Freitas & Machado de Mendonça, 1960
- Sclerotrichum Rudolphi, 1819
- Tenoranema Mas-Coma & Esteban, 1985
- Trichuris
Footnotes
[edit]- ^ Hallan (2007)
References
[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to Trichuridae.
- Hallan, Joel (ed.) (2007): Family Trichuridae. Version of 2007-AUG-07. Retrieved 2010-MAY-05.