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Bothrium information


Bothrium

Bothria (from Greek bothrion = small pit, diminutive of bothros = pit, trench) are elongate, dorsal or ventral longitudinal grooves on the scolex of cestoda. They have weak muscles but are capable of some sucking action. Bothria occur as a single or two pair and are typical of the order Pseudophyllidea (e.g., Diphyllobothrium).[1][2]

Bothria are muscular grooves that provide attachment by pinching host tissue between them.

  1. ^ Richard C. Brusca, Gary J. Brusca. Invertebrates. Sinauer Associates; 2 edition. 2003
  2. ^ Jones MK, Beveridge I, Campbell RA, Palm HW. Terminology of the sucker-like organs of the scolex of trypanorhynch cestodes. Systematic Parasitology 59: 121–126, 2004. Archived March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine

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Bothrium

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Diphyllobothrium

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lower body. Each side of the scolex has a slit-like groove, which is a bothrium for attachment to the intestine. The scolex attaches to the neck, or proliferative...

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Bothria

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Bothria may refer to: bothria, plural of bothrium, an anatomical feature of the scolex of certain kinds of tapeworm. Bothria (fly), a genus of flies in...

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