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1 April 1994 Postharmostomiasis in Wild Turkeys in New Mexico
Danny B. Pence
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Abstract

Postharmostomum gallinum (Trematoda: Digenea; Brachylaimidae) is reported for the second time from the wild turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) in North America. Seventy-six, 14 and three sexually mature specimens, respectively, were removed from the ceca of three of five wild turkeys collected in southeastern New Mexico (USA). Local transmission of this infection was inferred since 10 immature specimens of P. gallinum also were collected from one host. In the turkey with the greatest intensity of mature trematodes, a concurrent hemorrhagic inflammation of the cecum apparently was associated with this infection. Specimens of P. gallinum from these wild turkeys were morphologically indistinguishable from, but their body and egg measurements were larger than, specimens described from the usual Eurasian galliform and columbiform hosts.

Pence: Postharmostomiasis in Wild Turkeys in New Mexico
Danny B. Pence "Postharmostomiasis in Wild Turkeys in New Mexico," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 30(2), 285-286, (1 April 1994). https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-30.2.285
Received: 12 July 1993; Published: 1 April 1994
KEYWORDS
Cecal trematodes
hemorrhagic inflammation
Meleagris gallopavo
new locality record
Postharmostomum gallinum
wild turkey
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