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| Ascaridae egg found in cynodont coprolite dated 240 million years old [Credit: An. Acad. Bras. Ciênc.] |
Scott Gardner, a parasitologist and director of the Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, was among an international group of scientists who published the study in the journal Parasites & Vectors.
"This discovery represents a first for our team and I think it opens the door to finding additional parasites in other species of fossil organisms," he said.
The team found the pinworm egg in a coprolite -- fossilized feces -- collected in 2007 at an excavation site in Rio Grande do Sul state in southern Brazil.
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| Scott Gardner [Credit: Craig Chandler] |
The pinworm egg, representing an undescribed or "new species," was named Paleoxyuriscockburni, in honor of Aidan Cockburn, founder of the Paleopathology Association.
The structure of the pinworm egg placed it in a biological group of parasites that occur in animals that ingest large amounts of plant material. Its presence helped scientists deduce which cynodont species, of several found at the collection site, most likely deposited the coprolite.
Since the field of paleoparasitology, or the study of ancient parasites, emerged in the early 20th century, scientists have identified parasites of both plants and animals that date back as far as 500 million years ago.
The study of parasites in ancient animals can help determine the age of fossilized organisms and help establish dates of origin and diversification for association between host species and parasites. Coprolites are a key part of the study, enabling a better understanding of the ecological relationships between hosts and parasites.
Author: Leslie Reed | Source: University of Nebraska-Lincoln [December 01, 2014]







