Fig. 240.—Large and small hooklets of Tænia marginata. 280/1. (After Leuckart.)

This species, which in structure resembles Tænia solium, lives in the intestine of the dog and the wolf. It attains 1·5 to 4 m. in length, possesses a double crown of thirty to forty hooks, on an average thirty-six to thirty-eight hooks, and in its larval stage (Cysticercus tenuicollis) lives in the peritoneal cavity of ruminants and the pig, occasionally in the monkey and squirrel.

It is included in this work because, according to one statement, C. tenuicollis is supposed to have been observed in man in North America; but the case is not quite certain, as the number of hooks was less than in C. tenuicollis and coincided with C. cellulosæ, although the size of the cysticercus appeared to point to C. tenuicollis. A yet earlier statement of Eschricht, that Cysticercus tenuicollis had been observed in Iceland in the liver of a man, is undoubtedly due to an error.

Tænia serrata, Goeze, 1782.

This parasite attains a length of from 0·5 to 2 m., possesses a double crown of thirty-four to forty-eight (mostly forty) hooks. It lives exclusively in the intestine of the dog, the corresponding cysticercus (Cysticercus pisiformis) living in the mesentery of the hare and rabbit. We mention this species with all reserve amongst the parasites of man, because Vital states that he has observed it twice in Constantine (Algeria) in human beings. The data, however, are not sufficient to characterize the species. It is highly probable that they relate to Tænia solium. Galli-Valerio even swallowed five specimens of Cysticercus pisiformis, but without result.

Tænia crassicollis, Rud., 1810.

I only mention this species from the intestine of the domestic cat because Krabbe regards its occurrence in man as possible. It attains a length of 60 cm. and is armed; its cysticercus (Cysticercus fasciolaris) lives in the liver of mice and rats. In Jutland, according to Krabbe, chopped-up mice (spread on bread) are eaten raw, being a national remedy for retention of urine, and this custom affords the possibility of the introduction of C. fasciolaris into the intestine of man (Nord. med. Arkiv, 1880, xii).

Tænia saginata, Goeze, 1782.