WoRMS taxon details
original description
Odhner, T. (1910). Nordostafrikanische Trematoden, grösstenteils vom Weissen Nil (von der schweidischen zoologischen Expedition gesammelt). <em>Results Swedish Zool. Exped. Egypt and White Nile 1901, (Jägerskiöld).</em> 23A: 1–170. page(s): 8, footnote [details]
taxonomy source
Dronen, N. O.; Calhoun, D. M.; Simcik, S. R. (2012). Mesocoelium Odhner, 1901 (Digenea: Mesocoelidae) revisited; a revision of the family and re-evaluation of species composition in the genus. <em>Zootaxa.</em> 3387: 1–96. [details]
taxonomy source
Tsuchida, K.; Urabe, M.; Nishikawa, K.; Hoso, M.; Wu, SP. (2024). Addressing the taxonomic confusion of Mesocoelium Odhner, 1910 (Trematoda: Plagiorchioidea: Mesocoeliidae) in Japanese urodelan and anuran amphibians. <em>Systematic Parasitology.</em> , available online at https://doi.org/10.1007/s11230-023-10126-z [details]
additional source
Imkongwapang, R.; Jyrwa, D. B.; Lal, P.; Tandon, V. (2012). A checklist of helminth parasite fauna in anuran Amphibia (frogs) of Nagaland, Northeast India. <em>Journal of Parasitic Diseases.</em> 38(1): 85-100., available online at https://doi.org/10.1007/s12639-012-0180-6 [details]
redescription
Dronen, N. O.; Calhoun, D. M.; Simcik, S. R. (2012). Mesocoelium Odhner, 1901 (Digenea: Mesocoelidae) revisited; a revision of the family and re-evaluation of species composition in the genus. <em>Zootaxa.</em> 3387: 1–96. [details]
identification resource
Skrjabin, K. I., Morozov, F. N. (1959). Family Mesocoeliidae Dollfus, 1950. <em>Osnovy Trematodologii.</em> 16: 634–703. (In Russian). page(s): 636 [details]
identification resource
Dronen, N. O.; Calhoun, D. M.; Simcik, S. R. (2012). Mesocoelium Odhner, 1901 (Digenea: Mesocoelidae) revisited; a revision of the family and re-evaluation of species composition in the genus. <em>Zootaxa.</em> 3387: 1–96. [details]
identification resource
Pojmańska, T. (2008). Family Mesocoeliidae Dollfus, 1929. In: Bray, R. A.; Gibson, D. I.; Jones, A. (Eds). <em>Keys to the Trematoda. Volume 3.</em> Wallingford, CAB International and the Natural History Museum, pp. 261–263. page(s): 262 [details]
| |