Adult Linguatula serrata uses papillae on its annuli to sense its environment.
Communication Channels: tactile ; chemical
Perception Channels: tactile ; chemical
Although specific predators for this species are unknown, L. serrata depends on predator-prey relationships to reach its hosts. To become an adult, a carnivorous mammal must prey on herbivorous mammals which already have the parasitic larvae. This pentastomid has a relatively low host specificity, infecting many herbivorous mammals as juveniles and many carnivorous mammals as adults. This generalist approach helps the parasite evade a host defense.
Lengths range from a few millimeters to 15 centimeters (cm). The adult male L. serrata is 1.8-2 cm, while an adult female is 8-13 cm. The worm is colorless and transparent. Larval L. serrata normaly measure 3-4 mm. Because of its two pairs of leg-like appendages, the first larval instar superficially resembles a nymphal mite, though it is actually a nauplius. During this stage, the parasite has a stylet to tunnel through gut walls, along with appendages for further propulsion. After a series of molts, the worm loses its leg-like appendages and tapers from its cone shaped head down to its posterior end. The ventral has four hook pits. The body is covered with about 70-100 annuli, or rings, with many pores and spines on each annulus arranged in rows. The first three abdominal annuli have three pairs of sensory papillae. After multiple instar stages, adult L. serrata have unaligned pores or stigmata along their bodies. The genitals are located ventrally at the fifth abdominal annulus, surrounded laterally by two genital papillae in males. Both adults and larvae are dorso-ventrally flattened.
Other Physical Features: ectothermic ; heterothermic ; bilateral symmetry
Sexual Dimorphism: female larger
Larvae can survive for up to two years encysted before they calcify and die in the intermediate host. There was little information on the longevity of adults, but other pentastomid species can live for around ten years.
As an adult, Linguatula serrata lives in the nasal airways or frontal sinuses of dogs, wolves, foxes, felines or other carnivorous mammals. The parasite's eggs are transferred when coughed or sneezed out from the lungs to the external environment. If swallowed by the definitive host, the eggs are passed through the feces to the external environment. The intermediate host ingests the eggs off aquatic or wet vegetation in the external environment. In the larval stage, it is endoparasitic on herbivorous and domesticated mammals such as sheep, camels, goats, cattle, rabbits, rodents and pigs. During these sexually immature stages, it resides in the herbivorous mammal's mesenteric lymph nodes, lungs and liver. Humans are an accidental definitive host for Linguatula serrata. Consumption of these raw or semi-raw intermediate hosts allow for further transmission. Cases of infection of this parasite commonly occur where animals are raised, such as slaughterhouses and farms. Eggs survive well in aqueous environments, such as water or wet vegetation, where they are ingested. Since their hosts are agricultural animals and the eggs require an aqueous environments, the occurrence of L. serrata depends on the sanitation of water and food in the area.
Habitat Regions: temperate ; tropical ; terrestrial
Aquatic Biomes: lakes and ponds; temporary pools
Wetlands: marsh ; swamp ; bog
Other Habitat Features: urban ; suburban ; agricultural
Linguatula serrata can be found in several countries in Asia, Southeast Asia, the Middle East, Europe, North Africa, and the Americas. Although the distribution of this pentastomid is almost global, it is predominantly prevalent in warm subtropical and temperate regions. Most cases of linguatuliasis or pentastomiasis are recorded in the Middle East.
Biogeographic Regions: nearctic ; palearctic ; oriental ; neotropical
Adults ingest food in the final host's respiratory tract. Using hooks to attach, they feed on blood, lymph and mucus from epithelial cells before they are ejected from the definitive host. Larvae are primarily non-feeding, encysting in a variety of host tissues.
Animal Foods: body fluids
Primary Diet: carnivore (Sanguivore , Eats body fluids)
This parasite uses domesticated and wild herbivores as intermediate hosts, including sheep, goats, camels, and many other small ruminants. The definitive hosts of L. serrata include carnivores such as dogs, wolves, and coyotes. Humans can serve both roles. They are always parasitic or paratenic, causing zoonotic disease in definitive hosts or remaining asymptomatic as larvae in the paratenic host. Linguatula serrata impacts agricultural ecosystems by decreasing fitness and sometimes causing mortality in livestock. Most of this livestock is herbivorous and controlled by humans; few natural ecosystems are affected. Similarly, the chief definitive hosts of L. serrata are dogs existing in urban areas, also leaving natural ecosystems relatively unaffected.
Ecosystem Impact: parasite
Species Used as Host:
There is no known positive importance for this species.
Many human infections arise in underdeveloped areas of the world like the Middle East, India, Africa, and Southeast Asia, where eating raw glands of cattle, sheep, and other herbivorous mammals is a part of a normal diet. Infection may also be acquired through ingestion of eggs from plants or water in the environment. Infestations of the worm are frequent in humans, and deaths have even been reported due to blocked nasal passages. Because humans are often the accidental intermediate or final host of L. serrata, the pentastomid is of medical and economic importance. Those who can afford medical help can direct their treatment either towards eliminating the nymphs in their system or relieving the symptoms of infestation through nasal sprays or antihistamines.
Linguatula serrata also frequently infects domesticated animals used for agriculture and stray animals also used for provisions. Infection in liver, mesenteric lymph nodes, and other glands may cause weakening and death of the animals, thus weakening the agricultural economy. Infection rates of small ruminants in the Middle East are significant, as up to 50% of sheep may be infected within a region.
Negative Impacts: injures humans (causes disease in humans ); causes or carries domestic animal disease
After being ingested by an herbivorous intermediate host from an aqueous environment, eggs hatch into their first larval stage, looking superficially like a mite. Many refer to these larvae as "nymphs," although they actually are a nauplius. The larvae use leg-like appendages for movement through the intermediate host. The first larval stage of L. serrata tunnels through gut wall with a stylet, as the host elicits an immune response. The immature larvae are then encysted. Encysting can happen in a number of tissues, including the liver, lymph nodes and muscle. This stage of infection is typically asymptomatic. After a series of molts in these cysts, the third stage larvae lose the leg-like appendages and can travel in between the abdominal cavity and the abdominal wall. While the larvae are encysted, many of them die and calcify after about two years, but if the definitive, carnivorous host feeds upon the intermediate host when the larvae are in their third stage, the carnivore acquires the parasite. The larvae develop to their adult stage in the nasopharynx of the carnivorous mammals and mate.
Development - Life Cycle: metamorphosis ; diapause
Linguatula serrata is not endangered, nor does it typically affect endangered animals.
US Federal List: no special status
CITES: no special status
State of Michigan List: no special status
Although sexually dimorphic, larger females attempt to find similarly sized males to mate. Linguatula serrata females mate once over the course of their lifetime, but due to huge spermathecal storage and oocytes continuously being ejected from the ovary, females can lay thousands or millions of eggs per year.
Linguatula serrata reaches sexual maturity after several molts in a carnivorous host's repiratory tract. This is where similarly sized females and males mate, though pentastomid males are generally smaller than pentastomid females. Pentastomid females usually mate only once during their lifetime, but eggs develop inside females, who have already stored sperm in the spermathecae. Females can produce hundreds of thousands of eggs, which are expelled into the environment through nasal discharge, saliva or feces.
Key Reproductive Features: iteroparous ; year-round breeding ; gonochoric/gonochoristic/dioecious (sexes separate); sexual ; fertilization (Internal ); oviparous ; sperm-storing
Females can lay up to one million eggs in the definitive host per year. The eggs are about 70-90 micrometers and contain the fully-developed first stage of the larva. While many pentastomid males die directly after mating, Linguatula serrata males may live for a period of time after mating.
Parental Investment: no parental involvement; pre-fertilization
"Parasitism of man by the adults of this genus is very rare and has been observed only with Linguatula serrata, a species that lives in dogs, wolves, and foxes. The nymphs were recovered from mesenteric lymph nodes plus various viscera including the brain, lungs, etc. Nymphs have also been found in the anterior chamber of the eye of man at two occasions in North America. In the Middle East, nymphs of Linguatula serrata have been removed from the naso-pharynx of patients suffering halzoun or marara syndrome." (A. Fain, 1975.)
Linguatula serrata is a species of cosmopolitan zoonotic parasite, belonging to the tongueworm order Pentastomida. They are wormlike parasites of the respiratory systems of vertebrates. They live in the nasopharyngeal region of mammals. Cats, dogs, foxes, and other carnivores are normal hosts of this parasite. Apparently, almost any mammal is a potential intermediate host.
The adult parasite is dorsoventrally flattened, tapering backwards resembling a vertebrate tongue, thus, inspiring the common name of "tongueworm."
Physical characteristics: males: 18–20 millimetres (0.71–0.79 in) in length, while the females are 80–120 mm (3.1–4.7 in).
L. serrata can be found worldwide but especially in warm subtropical and temperate regions.
Adult L. serrata embed their forebody into the nasopharyngeal mucosa, feeding on blood and fluids. Females live at least two years and produce millions of eggs. Eggs exit the host in nasal secretion or, if swallowed, with feces. When swallowed by an intermediate host, the four-legged larvae (resembling a mite) hatch in the small intestine, penetrate the intestinal wall, and lodge in tissues, particularly in lungs, liver, and lymph nodes. The nymphal stage develops. When eaten by a definitive host, infective nymphs either attach in the upper digestive tract or quickly travel there from the stomach, reaching the nasopharynx. Females begin egg production in about six months.
Both male and females are required to mate for successful reproduction. Males choose to mate with females that are close to their own size. Females contain hundreds of thousands of eggs.
Linguatulosis is a condition associated with the organism Linguatula serrata. More generally, linguatulosis can be considered a form of "pentastomiasis", which refers to all diseases caused by pentastomids, including porocephaliasis.[1]
This disease is often accidentally identified during autopsy because of its asymptomatic effect on the body.
Among Linguatula serrata infecting Cairo street dogs, 10% were juveniles, 59% were males, and 31% were females, corresponding to a sex ratio of 1.9:1. Of all infections, 67% were found during spring and summer, compared to 33% during fall and winter. The probable source of canine infections is infected lymph nodes of cattle, sheep, goats, and/or camels, which produce the symptoms of halzoun and the marrara syndrome in man when consumed raw.[2]
Linguatula serrata is a species of cosmopolitan zoonotic parasite, belonging to the tongueworm order Pentastomida. They are wormlike parasites of the respiratory systems of vertebrates. They live in the nasopharyngeal region of mammals. Cats, dogs, foxes, and other carnivores are normal hosts of this parasite. Apparently, almost any mammal is a potential intermediate host.