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  • Article
    Smyth JD.
    Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg. 1977;71(2):93-100.
    The genetics of speciation in the genus Echinococcus are briefly discussed. As the organism is a hermaphrodite and multiplies asexually in the larval stage, the genetic mechanism for the ready production of new strains is inherent in the life-cycle. Some biological, biochemical and nutritional differences between the horse and sheep strains are examined. The sheep strain may be grown to sexual maturity, in vitro, in a diphasic system; the horse strain fails to grow in such a system. Differences have also been demonstrated between the soluble proteins of the two strains. The sheep strain is infective to man but, probably, non-infective to horses. The horse strain (which is now the major strain in the U.K and Ireland) appears to be poorly infective to sheep and may prove to be non-infective to man. The importance of determining the basic characteristics of other strains of E. granulosus are also stressed.
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