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New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research abstracts


Metazoan parasites of the snapper, Pagrus auratus (Bloch & Schneider, 1801), in New Zealand. 2. Site-specificity

Angela D. Sharples
Clive W. Evans

Developmental Biology and Cancer
Research Group
School of Biological Sciences
University of Auckland
Private Bag 92 019
Auckland, New Zealand

Abstract  The metazoan parasites of the snapper, Pagrus auratus, collected in the Hauraki Gulf of New Zealand were surveyed and their distribution mapped and examined in relation to the age of the host. Nine species of ectoparasites and seven species of endoparasites were recorded and all were found to exhibit some degree of site-specificity. The gill monogeneans Lamellodiscus pagrosomi and Bivagina pagrosomi were found in well-defined microhabitats on the gills. L. pagrosomi was abundant on the middle section of the second gill arch and was found in greater numbers on the distal zone of the gill filaments of the external hemibranch. In contrast, B. pagrosomi was particularly abundant on the first gill arch and on the basal zone of gill filaments of the external hemibranch. A third gill monogenean, Choricotyle australiensis, was found attached to the gill filaments in snapper of 3 years and older but was largely restricted to the buccal cavity in younger host fish. This suggests that site-specificity may not be a static attribute but may alter along with other parameters of the host fish such as age and size. The gastro-intestinal parasites were also found to exhibit habitat partitioning and segregation into specific niches with a highly site-specific digenean, Diphtherostomum sp., occurring almost exclusively in the lumen of the rectum.

Keywords  Pagrus auratus; snapper; parasites; distribution; site-specificity

New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research, 1995: Vol. 29: 203-211

0028-8330/95/2902-0203 $2.50/0 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand 1995

PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (985K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)


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