AbstractA retrospective study on differentLymnaea glabrasamples collected from central France between 1993 and 2010 was carried out to determine the prevalence of natural co-infections withCalicophoron daubneyiandFasciola hepatica, and to specify the composition of redial burdens. Experimental infections ofL. glabraperformed during the same period of time were also analysed to study metacercarial production of each digenean in co-infected snails. Controls were naturally or experimentally co-infectedGalba truncatula. In natural co-infections, prevalence was 0.7% inL. glabra(186/25,128) and 0.4% inG. truncatula(137/31,345). Low redial burdens were found in these snails, withF. hepaticarediae significantly more numerous inL. glabrathan inG. truncatula(7.5 per snail instead of 5.2). In contrast, the total numbers ofC. daubneyirediae in both lymnaeids were close to each other (4.3 and 3.0 rediae, respectively). In experimentally co-infected groups, prevalence was greater inG. truncatulathan in the other lymnaeid (6.3% instead of 3.0%). Significantly shorter patent periods and lower metacercarial production for each digenean were noted inL. glabrathan inG. truncatula.However, in both lymnaeids, the two types of cercariae were released during the same shedding waves and several peaks during the patent period were synchronous. In spite of a greater shell height forL. glabra, metacercarial production of both digeneans in co-infected snails was lower than that inG. truncatula, thus indicating a still incomplete adaptation between these FrenchL. glabraand both parasites.