Screw-worm larvae, Cochliomyia hominivorax. At ca 10 mm long, these were about to pupate.
As an ecologist, I am meant to view all animals with an objective eye and, usually, with a positive sense of wonder, not unusually accompanied by feelings of joy. Admittedly, the joy usually only comes when seeing a mammal, snake or bird of prey. Otherwise I just get a sense of wonder. However, even I, a naturalist to the core, do occasionally have reason to draw the line.. There are even times when I give myself permission to feel revulsion at certain members of the natural world. One of these is Tiger Leeches (Haemadipsa picta), which I removed from various selected parts of my anatomy more times than I care to mention when in Danum Valley, Malsysia, in 1997.
The other is the Screw-worm larva, several specimens of which can been seen in the photo above.
A short-haired pointer (a breed of dog) was brought into the clinic today. Physical examnation revealed a swelling on the distal left thoracic limb. The dog was taken to the infirmary and the area cleaned. A blood sample was taken for blood work. I gently inserted rat-toothed forceps into the hole in the swelling and removed the larvae one at a time. Each time they came out wriggling. The dog was being restrained all the time in right lateral decubitus (on its right side) by a veterianry nurse whilst I removed the maggots. They are the larvae of the familar blue-bottle fly, which lays its eggs on the margins of wounds in domestic animals.
I had dealt with this parasitic infection before, but in wild species. Once in the right wing of a Blue-and-Yellow Macaw Ara ararauna and Silvery Marmoset Callithrix argentata.
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