Skip to main content
. 2019 Apr 1;9:359–369. doi: 10.1016/j.ijppaw.2019.02.001

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2

Microphotographs of permanent slides of diphyllobothriid tapeworms. A – Dibothriocephalus alasensis from Canis familiaris, Hooper Bay, Alaska, March 18, 1958; fixed after relaxation by R. Rausch (MSBP 17029). B – Dibothriocephalus latus from Homo sapiens, Chile, 19 November 2012; contracted clinical sample fixed with ‘cold’ fixative by T. Weitzel. C – Dibothriocephalus dalliae from C. familiaris, Alaska, 5 November 1970; fixed after relaxation by R. Rausch (MSBP 26232). D – Diphyllobothrium lanceolatum from Erignathus barbatus, Greenland, 7 October 1987; collected by P. Baagoe (SNM). E – Dibothriocephalus cf. nihonkaiensis from Homo sapiens, Newtok, Alaska, 26 March 1967; fixed after relaxation by R. Rausch (MSBP 26244). F – Diphyllobothrium stemmacephalum from Lagenorhynchus acutus, Wellfleet Bay, Cape Cod, Massachusetts, 1998; collected by J.N. Caira. G – Diphyllobothrium mobile from Ommatophoca rossii, Antarctica, 11 August 1901, Deutsche Südpolar-Expedition; collected by E. Dagobert von Drygalski (ZNB 5188). H – Dibothriocephalus ursi from Ursus arctos middendorfi, Karluk Lake, Kodiak Island, 9 October 1952; fixed after relaxation by R. Rausch; paratype (MSBP 3269). I – Schistocephalus sp. from C. familiaris, Newtok, Alaska, 4 April 1958; fixed after relaxation by R. Rausch (MSBP 17939). Acronyms of museum collections: MSBP – Museum of Southwestern Biology, Division of Parasitology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S.A.; SNM – Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm, Sweden; ZNB – Zoologische Museum Berlin, Berlin, Germany.