Article
Toxocara canis (Werner, 1782) eggs in the Pleistocene site of Menez-Dregan, France (300,000-500,000 years before present)
Registro en:
BOUCHET, Françoise et al. Toxocara canis (Werner, 1782) Eggs in the Pleistocene Site of Menez-Dregan, France (300,000-500,000 Years Before Present). Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, v. 98, n. 1, p. 137-139, 2003.
0074-0276
10.1590/S0074-02762003000900020
1678-8060
Autor
Bouchet, Françoise
Araújo, Adauto
Stephanie, Harter
Chaves, Sérgio Miranda
Duarte, Antonio Nascimento
Monnier, Jean Laurent
Ferreira, Luiz Fernando
Resumen
On the archaeological site of Menez-Dregan in Brittany, France, dated 300,000-500,000 years-old, paleoparasitological analysis of cave deposits led to the detection of well-preserved helminth eggs, which morphology and morphometry pointed to the diagnosis of Toxocara canis eggs, a parasite of carnivore mammals. Paleolithic remains suggested a parasitism of the hyena Crocuta spelaea or other canids that inhabited the region.