The development of the swimbladder nematode Anguillicola crassus Kuwahara, Niimi et Itagaki, 1974 in the definitive host (eels) was studied under experimental conditions. Small eels, Anguilla anguilla (L.) with body length 8-16 cm were infected by feeding them intermediate host copepods (Cyclops strenuus Fischer) harbouring third-stage larvae of this parasite. These experiments showed that, at 20-22° C, the development from the third-to the fourth-stage larvae lasted approximately three weeks, but some retarding third-stage larvae occurred in the wall of the host’s swimbladder or hyperparasitizing in the cuticle of adult nematodes as late as three months p.i. Young adults developed in the lumen of the swimbladder within approximately one month and noneinbryonated eggs first appeared in females 6-7 weeks p.i. The prepatent period was about three months and the patent period could be estimated to last no more than a month. Females degenerated soon after oviposition. The experiments confirmed that the size of mature A. crassus depends on the body size of its definitive host (eel).