Ophidascaris robertsi
Ophidascaris robertsi is a nematode usually parasitic in the carpet python. It is found in Australia and Papua New Guinea. Pythons serve as the typical hosts for Ophidascaris robertsi, which has an indirect life cycle. The adult parasites develop nodular masses in the oesophagus and stomach of carpet pythons and place a small piece of their anterior bodies into the nodules that protrude from the digestive mucosa. When endemic parasites like Ophidascaris robertsi infect local fauna, the pathological changes that follow are frequently self-limiting or do not result in illness.
Description
Identification of Ophidascaris robertsi from closely related species such as Ophidascaris moreliae is noted to be difficult, depending on the morphology of the egg surface, if cervical alae or post-oesophageal caeca are present, and the shape of the lips.Hosts
Reported infections in pythons include Antaresia childreni, Aspidites melanocephalus, Aspidites ramsayi, and Morelia spilota. There are also reports of infections in a sugar glider, a koala, a bandicoot and in other small to medium-sized marsupial species. One case report of zoonotic infection in a human brain from Australia during 2021–22 was reported in August 2023.A 2021 study on host loss in parasite species used Ophidascaris robertsi as one of the subject taxa.