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Definition of Gasterophilus
1. Noun. Type genus of the Gasterophilidae: horse botflies.
Generic synonyms: Arthropod Genus
Group relationships: Family Gasterophilidae, Gasterophilidae
Member holonyms: Gasterophilus Intestinalis, Horse Botfly
Medical Definition of Gasterophilus
1. A genus of botflies (horse botflies or warble flies) that cause enteric myiasis in domestic and wild horses and other equids. The bee-like adult attaches eggs to the hairs of the legs or body of the horse; infective eggs hatch when contacted by the lips of the horse, and the larvae attach to, penetrate, and are swallowed or burrow through the tissues to the stomach, where they adhere. After some months, the larvae pass out with the faeces, pupate, and emerge as adults. Moderate infection produces little or no symptomatology; heavy infection can cause severe digestive disorders. Important species include Gasterophilus haemorrhoidalis (the redtailed botflies, a nose fly); Gasterophilus intestinalis (the common horse botfly or nit fly), whose larvae are found in the oesophageal portion of the stomach; Gasterophilus nasalis or Gasterophilus veterinus (chin fly or throat botfly), found in the throat or under the jaws of the horse, the larvae migrating to the pyloric portion of the stomach or the anterior duodenum; and Gasterophilus pecuorum (the dark-winged horsefly), the most common and pathogenic species in Europe (absent in the U.S.). Synonym: Gastrophilus. Origin: G. Gaster, belly, stomach, + philos, fond (05 Mar 2000)
Lexicographical Neighbors of Gasterophilus
Literary usage of Gasterophilus
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Natural History of the Insects Mentioned in Shakspeare's Plays: With by Robert Patterson (1841)
"One of the species devoted to the horse (Gasterophilus equi), lays its eggs, not
indiscriminately Gasterophilus Equi. over the body, but about the parts ..."
2. The Western Rajputana States: A Medico-topographical and General Account of by Archibald Adams (1899)
"... and (Estrus bovis (the cattle-fly), are all of the Diptera order and common
pests here. Bots, due to the eggs of Gasterophilus equi, are common 2 B ..."
3. The Entomologist's Text Book: An Introduction to the Natural History by John Obadiah Westwood (1838)
"But the tribes of insects which prey upon our cattle are equally numerous,
including ft Gasterophilus equi. Gasterophilus ..."
4. Code of Federal Regulations by Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Staff (2005)
"... Bots (oral and gastric stages): Gasterophilus spp. including G. intestinalis and
G. nasalis; Lungworms (adults and fourth-stage larvae): Dictyocaulus ..."