Orlando Sentinel

Tokyo museum explores the world of parasites

- By Risa Tanabe

It’s hard to believe that about 60,000 parasitolo­gical specimens are housed in a building on bustling Megurodori avenue in Tokyo, which is lined with fashionabl­e shops. Stepping inside Meguro Parasitolo­gical Museum, one may expect an eerie atmosphere, but it’s actually crowded with families.

About 300 exhibits, some in formalin, are neatly showcased and illuminate­d by LED lights, which does give the scene a mystical look.

The exhibits on the first floor show the diversity of parasites, such as a type of mite that swells up to about the size of a quarter from sucking blood, and futagomush­i

an organism that spends its entire life fused together with another of its kind, forming the shape of a butterfly. The parasites on display have various types of biology. For example,

sneaks into snails and makes their eye stalks look like caterpilla­rs in order to be eaten by a bird and thereby reproduce.

“Parasites are usually viewed as bad fellows. But most of them have evolved to coexist with their hosts. Only a few are harmful,” said museum director Kazuo Ogawa.

Parasites that have a relationsh­ip with the human body are shown on the second floor. An eye-catching exhibit is a 28.9-foot-long tapeworm. The man who was the parasite’s host reportedly said he didn’t notice any symptoms at all. A 28.9foot-long rope at the exhibit allows visitors to get a sense of how long the parasite was, appalling visiting children who picked up the rope.

The museum was founded by the late Satoru Kamegai, a doctor who studied malaria and other diseases at a research institute of the now defunct South Manchuria Railway and opened a clinic in Meguro Ward, Tokyo, after World War II. He put his own money into the museum, in the hope that people would get a better grasp of parasites during a time when intestinal worms and other parasites were rampant in Japan.

Only about 70 specimens were on show when the museum opened. But from that point on, Kamegai collected specimens by whatever means possible, such as by getting parasites from dead dogs on the side of the road or obtaining organs removed from stuffed specimens.

The museum also exhibits a new type of parasite that Kamegai found as a result of six months of research when he participat­ed in an academic study of the anatomy of

an order of fish. The number of parasitic diseases in Japan has decreased sharply due to better hygiene and prevention measures.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States