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Re: Dinosaur parasites



I've got a question. I am wondering how strange and exotic dinosaur parasites can have been, and how much it takes to guess what these parasites would have been.

I happen to be right up on how many and what kinds of parasites affect dinosaurs, because one of my little pet dinosaurs has something with symptoms that suggest that sort of thing wrong with her. Many of them can be found in stools only on an intermittent basis, and with four little dinosaurs the cost of getting them properly screened by a vet can be prohibitive, so I've got a microscope on the way, and I've been boning up on how to spot the things.

Today's dinosaurs get giardia, coccidians, trichowhatsits, roundworms, tapeworms, pinworms, and in short just about everything mammals get. Often they get the same species or different species of the same genus. They also get itchy overgrowths of candida.

How could birds share all these parasites with mammals if their ancestors did not?

No parasites have been found that take over dinosaurs' minds yet, though mine often seem possessed by little devils!

Yours,
Dora Smith
Austin, TX
tiggernut24@yahoo.com
----- Original Message ----- From: "Robert J. Schenck" <nygdan@yahoo.com>
To: <dinosaur@usc.edu>
Sent: Sunday, April 30, 2006 3:36 PM
Subject: Re: Dinosaur parasites





--- Dann Pigdon <dannj@alphalink.com.au> wrote:

I seem to remember that many intestinal
parasites picked up by
herbivores are via eating grass with either
eggs or larvae on it.
There is, for example, a species of parasite that
infects ants, and "takes over" their behaviour.
It makes them crawl to the top of grass blades
and cling on with their pinchers, to make them
more likely to get eaten by grazzing cattle (the
next step in the parasite life cycle).  In fact,
this organism is so specific that it will
'relinquish' control during noon-time, when the
sun is very high, so that the ant can return to
normal behaviour to avoid dying from the heat.

It would be interesting to compare the plant
material in the infected
Iguanodon coprolites with that of other,
apparently healthy coprolites
from other Iguanodontids
[...]snip
(ie. attempts at
self-medication).

Or even to get a better idea of mesozoic ecosystems. Often parasites are species specific too. If the droppings can be correlated reasonably to a population, then it might be possible to determine how many species were in that population, by looking at species of the parasite (of course, sometimes the parasite species are 'cryptic' also). Or it might even be possible to look at the parasite as markers of different species between formations.

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