Coitocaecum parvum
Coitocaecum parvum is a digeneic trematode or flatworm that is parasitic to the intestine of the common bully or upland bully. The common and upland bully are freshwater fish of New Zealand that C. parvum uses as its definitive host. C. parvum is a hermaphroditic freshwater trematode that can omit its definitive host and produce eggs by selfing or progenesis inside its amphipod second intermediate host.
Life cycle
The life cycle of C. parvum begins when eggs are released into the water and hatch into free-swimming miracidia. The miracidia then penetrate the first intermediate host, Potamopyrgus antipodarum, where they multiply and develop into sporocysts. Next, free-living cercariae are asexually produced from the sporocysts and shed by the snails. These shed cercarial larvae then penetrate the hemocoel of the second intermediate host, Paracalliope fluviatilis to wait for the bully to undergo selfing.C. parvum will take up residence in the bully intestine where it will mature and reproduce eggs sexually or via self-fertilization. However, if the amphipod is not eaten, the C. parvum metacercariae mature within the amphipod where they produce viable eggs within the cyst in the hemocoel. Eggs produced in this fashion remain enclosed in the cyst until the amphipod dies. After amphipod death, the eggs are released into the water where they hatch into miracidia and are infective to the snail. The process of maturing within the intermediate host and eliminating the need for the definitive host is known as progenesis.
Life cycle choice
The progenetic life cycle choice is dependent upon opportunities for transmission and the risk of dead-end transmission. The worm can use cues from the amphipod caused by the presence of the predatory definitive host to interrupt its growth cycle in wait to be eaten. However, under low amounts of stress cues from the amphipod, the worm responds by adopting the progenetic lifecycle.Another factor involved in the choice of progenesis is the competition with other interspecies and intraspecies competition. In the case of interspecies coinfection, competition with Microphallus sp. favors progenesis in order to ensure C. parvum egg production. Intraspecies coinfection is when more than one C. parvum larvae infects the amphipod, and whoever reproduces faster is going to ensure passage of its genetic information.