1. Parasite load of Atlantic cod Gadus morhua in the Baltic Sea assessed by the liver category method, and associations with infection density and critical condition
- Author
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Marie Plambech Ryberg, Kurt Buchmann, Bastian Huwer, Jane Behrens, Uwe Krumme, Jan Dierking, Maria Sokolova, and Anders Nielsen
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Stock assessment ,Natural mortality stock assessment ,Zoology ,Aquatic Science ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Parasite load ,medicine ,Gadus ,Parasite hosting ,14. Life underwater ,Eastern Baltic cod ,Disease monitoring ,Ecology ,biology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Liver worm ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Nematode ,Nematode infection ,Baltic sea ,Atlantic cod ,Fulton condition factor - Abstract
During the 2010s, Atlantic cod Gadus morhua L. in the eastern Baltic Sea experienced increasing infection loads of the parasitic nematode Contracaecum osculatum (Rudolphi) in their livers. Starting in 2021, a mandatory part of the routine sampling protocol on Baltic monitoring surveys is to assign a liver category to individual cod livers, based on the number of nematodes visible on the liver surface, to follow spatiotemporal changes in nematode infection loads. The validity of the liver category method has never been evaluated. Based on data from 642 cod livers, the method was verified and found to be a good predictor of the total number of nematodes. Moreover, the probability of cod being in a critical condition increased with the parasite load. In addition to their direct applicability to Baltic cod, the present findings may inspire others working with disease in fish stocks to include parasite monitoring.
- Published
- 2022