1. Anisakid and Raphidascaridid parasites in Trachurus trachurus: infection drivers and possible effects on the host’s condition
- Author
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Monica Caffara, Paolo Sartor, Perla Tedesco, Fabio Macchioni, Carlo Pretti, Gianfranca Monni, Alessandro Ligas, Andrea Massaro, Vanessa Cocca, Francesca Cecchi, Macchioni F., Tedesco P., Cocca V., Massaro A., Sartor P., Ligas A., Pretti C., Monni G., Cecchi F., and Caffara M.
- Subjects
Trachurus trachurus ,Hysterothylacium spp ,Zoology ,Anisakis spp ,Biology ,Anisakiasis ,Anisakis ,Condition factor ,Fish Diseases ,Ascaridoidea ,Mediterranean Sea ,medicine ,Animals ,Fish Parasitology - Original Paper ,Larva ,General Veterinary ,Host (biology) ,Trachurus ,Fishes ,General Medicine ,Fish condition ,Infection drivers ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Anisakidae ,Infectious Diseases ,Infection driver ,Insect Science ,Coinfection ,Parasitology - Abstract
This study investigated the distribution of nematode larvae of Anisakidae and Raphidascarididae (genera Anisakis and Hysterothylacium) in Trachurus trachurus (Linnaeus, 1758) in the Ligurian and central-northern Tyrrhenian Seas. The relationship between the number of parasites and the length and weight parameters of the fish was assessed, and the possible effect of the parasites on the condition factor was evaluated. A total of 190 T. trachurus specimens were collected in July 2019. Parasites were found in 70 individuals. A total of 161 visible larvae were collected in the viscera. Morphological analysis revealed the presence of Anisakis spp. in 55 fish and Hysterothylacium spp. in 15 fish, while 5 fish showed coinfection with both genera. The specimens subjected to PCR (n = 67) showed that 85% of the Anisakis larvae analyzed belonged to the species A. pegreffii, while the remaining 15% belonged to hybrids of A. pegreffii-A. simplex (s.s.). A total of 58% (n = 7) of the Hysterothylacium larvae analyzed belonged to the species H. fabri, while 42% belonged to the species H. aduncum. Our results support the hypothesis that infection with these parasites does not affect the condition of the fish host analyzed, and that body size and depth are major drivers in determining infection levels with Anisakid and Raphidascaridid nematodes.
- Published
- 2021
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