Abstract
The internal colony-forming bacterial flora of the schistosome intermediate host snailBiomphalaria glabrata (Say) has been characterized in ca. 500 individual snails from Puerto Rico, Guadeloupe, and St. Lucia, and from laboratory aquaria. Freshly captured wild snails harbor 2–40×106 CFU·g−1, and healthy aquarium snails harbor 4–16×107 CFU·g−1, whereas moribund individuals have 4–10 times as many bacteria as healthy individuals from the same habitats.Pseudomonas spp. are the most common predominant bacteria in normal snails, whereasAcinetobacter, Aeromonas, andMoraxella spp. predominate in moribund snails. External bacterial populations in water appear to have little effect on the composition and size of the flora in any snail. In addition to normal (healthy) and moribund snails, a third group of snails has been distinguished on the basis of internal bacterial density and predominating genera. These “high-density” snails may have undergone stresses and may harbor opportunistic pathogens. The microfloras of wild and laboratory-reared snails can be altered and stimulated to increase in density by crowding the snails or treating them with antibiotics.
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Ducklow, H.W., Clausen, K. & Mitchell, R. Ecology of bacterial communities in the schistosomiasis vector snailBiomphalaria glabrata . Microb Ecol 7, 253–274 (1981). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02010308
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02010308