The population biology of two species of eyefluke, Diplostomum spathaceum and Tylodelphys clavata, in roach and rudd |
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Authors: | R. J. Burrough |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biological Sciences, University of Exeter, England |
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Abstract: | Infections of roach ( Rutilis rutilus ), and rudd ( Scardinius erythrophthalmus ), by the eyeflukes Diplostomun spathaceum and Tylodelphys clavata were studied in a lake over a three year period. T. clavata first appeared at the beginning of the study. Roach were heavily infected by both parasites, whereas the rudd contained very few specimens of either species. A small number of roach-rudd hybrids were also examined, and appeared to have a susceptibility intermediate between the parental types. Levels of T. clavata in roach increased throughout the study. This parasite had a life span of a year or less in the fish, and was continuously lost from the population. This loss was balanced by a minor infection period in April/May and a major one extending from August until January. The fish continued to accumulate infections until they reached a size of about 130 mm, but thereafter intensity fluctuated about the level reached. D. spathaceum infections similarly increased throughout the period of study, and there was a suggestion of a wave of infection in the spring. This parasite has a much longer life span, and levels of infection increased with fish size, only falling in the largest, and therefore oldest, hosts. The major changes in the parasite populations in the roach were reflected, to a lesser extent, in the rudd. Both species were over-dispersed, but the data from roach was too heterogeneous to fit to any theoretical models, whereas that from the rudd was found to conform to a Negative Binomial distribution. |
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