ŠIMKOVÁ, Andrea, Yves DESDEVISES, Milan GELNAR and Serge MORAND. Morhometric correlates of host specificity in Dactylogyrus species (Monogenea) parasites of European Cyprinid fish. Parasitology. United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 2001, vol. 123, -, p. 169-177. ISSN 0-521-57637-7.
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Basic information
Original name Morhometric correlates of host specificity in Dactylogyrus species (Monogenea) parasites of European Cyprinid fish
Authors ŠIMKOVÁ, Andrea, Yves DESDEVISES, Milan GELNAR and Serge MORAND.
Edition Parasitology, United Kingdom, Cambridge University Press, 2001, 0-521-57637-7.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Article in a journal
Field of Study 10600 1.6 Biological sciences
Country of publisher Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14310/01:00004773
Organization unit Faculty of Science
UT WoS 000170390500007
Keywords in English adaptation; host specificity; fish monogeneans; morphometric deterninamts; simulated phylogenies
Tags adaptation, fish monogeneans, host specificity, morphometric deterninamts, simulated phylogenies
Changed by Changed by: prof. RNDr. Milan Gelnar, CSc., učo 1931. Changed: 28/11/2001 17:18.
Abstract
We test the hypothesis that living on larger fish may impose constrains, i.e. the need to develop large attachment organs, related to the necessity to remain attached on large gills. For this, we compiled data on body size and morphometric maesurements of attachment organs of 44 Dactylogyrus species from 19 cyprinid fishes. Nineteen dactylogyrid species were considered as specialists and 25 as generalists. The lack of phylogenetic information lead us to perform comparative analyses using raw values and independant contrast obtained by random phylogenies. Our results show that rich parasite communities are formed by specialists and generalists, whereas poor communities are composed mainly of generalit parasites. Moreover, specialists are found on larger hosts, which may reflect a specialization on a predictable resource, as larger fish love longer and offer large gills for parasite colonization. Parasite specialization is shown to be linked with adaptation of attachment organs to their fish hosts. Two morphometric variables of the attachment organ, the total lenght of anchor and length of base of anchor, were positively correlated with host length for specialists.
Links
GA524/98/0940, research and development projectName: Diverzita parazitů jako indikátor enviromentálního stresu
Investor: Czech Science Foundation, Diversity of parasites like an indicator of environmental stress
MSM 143100010, plan (intention)Name: Časoprostorová dynamika biodiverzity v ekosystémech střední Evropy.
Investor: Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the CR, Spatiotemporal biodiversity dynamics in ecosystems of Central Europe
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