Definition of Miracidia. Meaning of Miracidia. Synonyms of Miracidia

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Miracidia. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Miracidia and, of course, Miracidia synonyms and on the right images related to the word Miracidia.

Definition of Miracidia

No result for Miracidia. Showing similar results...

Meaning of Miracidia from wikipedia

- contact with fresh water, they hatch and release miracidium. In this phase, miracidia are ciliated and free-swimming. This stage is completed upon coming in...
- if they enter freshwater, the eggs hatch into miracidia. Miracidia are free-swimming. The miracidia then infect gastropod intermediate hosts and develop...
- The hatchling is called a miracidium, a free-swimming, ciliated larva. Miracidia will then grow and develop within the intermediate host into a sac-like...
- them to hatch as miracidia, which then find a suitable intermediate snail host of the Lymnaeidae family. Inside this snail, the miracidia develop into sporocysts...
- with host ****. Eggs shed in water release free-swimming larval forms (Miracidia) that are infective to the intermediate host, in which a****ual reproduction...
- hatch within 15 minutes into the larvae called miracidia. Each miracidium is either male or female. Miracidia are covered with hair-like cilia with which...
- leading to release of the free-swimming, ciliated larvae called miracidia Miracidia find and penetrate the snails, which are the intermediate hosts (specific...
- note the two prominent suckers. Eggs ingested by the snail hatch into miracidia, which develop in the snail's hepatopancreas into the next stage, a sporocyst...
- are embryonated and contain the larvae called miracidia. Unlike most other flukes in which the miracidia undergo development and swim in water to infect...
- the eggs along with faeces. Eggs hatch in water into ciliated miracidia. The miracidia then enters the body of an intermediate host, which are snails...