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Parasitism and ecological relationships among deep-sea benthic fishes
Authors:R A Campbell  R L Haedrich  T A Munroe
Institution:(1) Department of Biology, Southeastern Massachusetts University, 02747 North Dartmouth, Massachusetts, USA;(2) Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 02543 Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA;(3) Present address: Department of Biology, Memorial University of Newfoundland, A1B 3X9 St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada;(4) Present address: Virginia Institute of Marine Science, 23062 Gloucester Point, Virginia, USA
Abstract:We have studied the metazoan parasite fauna of 52 species of deep-living benthic fishes from depths of 53 to 5000m off the New York Bight (39–49°N; 70–72°W). 17144 parasites were recovered from 1712 fishes. The infestation rate was 80%, with an average of 12.5 worms per host. Percentage occurrence by group among all fishes was Monogenea 12.9%, Digenea 48%, Cestoda 22.1%, Nematoda 54.5%, Acanthocephala 3.8%, and Copepoda 4.5%. Differing composition of the parasite fauna in different fish species reflects differences in diet. Specialized feeders are rather distinct; generalized feeders, which predominate, show overlaps in parasite fauna. In individual species, changes in diet with growth are reflected in changes in the parasite fauna. Infestation rate is directly related to abundance of the free-living fauna; hence, fish from within the submarine canyon are more heavily infested than those living without. Although it contains fewer families and genera than shallow faunas, the deep-sea parasite fauna is not extremely unusual in terms of its abundance, diversity, or host specificity. At the greatest depths, parasite abundance and diversity dramatically decline.
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