Influence of collection methods on the occurrence of alimentary canal helminth parasites in fish. |
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Authors: | E H Williams L Bunkley-Williams M J Dowgiallo W G Dyer |
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Affiliation: | Caribbean Aquatic Animal Health Project, Department of Marine Sciences, University of Puerto Rico, Lajas 00667-0980. |
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Abstract: | The effect of collecting trauma on the metazoan parasites in the alimentary canal of French grunts, Haemulon flavolineatum (Desmarest) (Perciformes: Haemulidae), was evaluated by comparing the number and species of parasites in 10-fish lots that were identical except for collecting technique. Collecting techniques included speared (dead), speared through the caudal peduncle (live), trapped, dipnetted at night, and ostracitoxin exposed. Dead, trapped, and toxin-stressed fish had no alimentary canal parasites, whereas speared-live and night-dipnetted fish had comparable numbers of parasites. Fish collected by using apparently traumatic techniques quickly expelled their alimentary canal metazoan parasites. Our results cast doubt on the reliability of traditional fish parasite surveys, studies on population dynamics of fish parasites, and experiments that employ these traumatic collecting methods. |
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