Changes in monogenean and copepod infestation on captive Acanthopagrus australis (Sparidae) |
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Authors: | F R Roubal |
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Institution: | Department of Parasitology, The University of Queensland, Brisbane 4072, Queensland, Australia |
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Abstract: | Infection levels by 17 species of ectoparasite on 491 yellowfin bream collected throughout 1990 from Moreton Bay, S.E. Queensland were compared to infections on 82 bream collected during the same period from a captive population in a large pond at Sea World, Gold Coast, Queensland. There was a significant increase in prevalence and/or intensity of monogeneans Lamellodiscus acanthopagri and Polylabroides multispinosus , but a decrease in the monogenean Anoplodiscus australis and the copepods Ergasilus australiensis, Lernanthropus atrox, Bomolochus stocki and Alella macrotrachelus on captive fish. Twenty-eight bream collected from the pond during autumn were placed in an experimental 1 m3 cage within the pond for 4–6 weeks. Compared to the baseline data for the pond, the caged fish showed increased prevalences of the monogeneans Lamellodiscus acanthopagri, L. squamosus, L. major and Haliotrema spariensis , and increased intensities of L. squamosus, Allomurraytrema robustum and P. multispinosus. The copepod Caligus epidemicus dropped off in preservative, but its abundance (average number per fish) was significantly higher on caged fish than on pond or wild fish. Increased infection levels by L. acanthopagri and A. robustum were due in part to autoinfection. The large skin area promoted large populations of C. epidemicus. |
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Keywords: | Monogenea Copepoda population Sparidae Acanthopagrus aquaculture |
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