Q.26 Free swimming ciliated larva of human liver fluke is 1.miracidium 2.sporocyst 3.cercaria 4.metacercaria

Q.26 Free swimming ciliated larva of human liver fluke is
1.miracidium
2.sporocyst
3.cercaria
4.metacercaria

The human liver fluke (Fasciola hepatica) exhibits a complex digenetic life cycle with distinct larval stages, where the free-swimming ciliated larva enables dispersal from the snail intermediate host. For Q.26—”Free swimming ciliated larva of human liver fluke is”—the correct answer is option 3: cercaria.

Option Analysis

Option 1: Miracidium
Miracidium is the first larval stage, ciliated and free-swimming, but it hatches from eggs in freshwater to penetrate snails specifically, not associated with liver fluke dispersal post-snail. Short-lived (few hours), it lacks a tail.
Incorrect; precedes snail infection, not the post-snail free-swimming phase.

Option 2: Sporocyst
Sporocyst is a sac-like, non-ciliated generation inside the snail’s tissues, undergoing asexual reproduction (polyembryony) to produce rediae. Stationary and internal, no free-swimming phase.
Wrong; not ciliated or free-living.

Option 3: Cercaria
Cercaria is the final snail-derived larva: tail-bearing, ciliated, free-swimming in water for hours/days, exiting snails en masse under favorable conditions (warm, moist). It encysts as metacercaria on vegetation.
Correct; matches “free swimming ciliated larva” precisely in liver fluke cycle.

Option 4: Metacercaria
Metacercaria is the encysted, infective stage on plants/herbage, dormant and non-motile (no cilia or swimming). Excysted by definitive host digestion.
Incorrect; sedentary cyst, not free-swimming.

Life Cycle Stages Overview

Stage Habitat/Mobility Role
Miracidium Free-swimming (water) Infects snail
Sporocyst Inside snail Asexual multiplication
Redia Inside snail Produces cercariae
Cercaria Free-swimming (water) Encysts as metacercaria
Metacercaria Encysted on vegetation Infects mammal

Cycle: Eggs → miracidium → snail (sporocyst/rediae → cercariae) → metacercaria → adult in bile duct. Requires snail (Lymnaea) intermediate host.

Exam Relevance

Essential for CSIR NET/GATE Parasitology: Distinguish trematode larvae—miracidium (egg hatch), cercaria (snail exit). Human infection via contaminated watercress; fascioliasis causes liver damage.

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