D 2005

Specificity and specialization of Dactylogyrus species parasitising cyprinid fish

ŠIMKOVÁ, Andrea; Olivier VERNEAU; Milan GELNAR a Serge MORAND

Základní údaje

Originální název

Specificity and specialization of Dactylogyrus species parasitising cyprinid fish

Název česky

Specificity and specialization of Dactylogyrus species parasitising cyprinid fish

Autoři

ŠIMKOVÁ, Andrea; Olivier VERNEAU; Milan GELNAR a Serge MORAND

Vydání

Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou, China, Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou, China : School of Life Sciences, Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou, s. 31-31, 2005

Nakladatel

School of Life Sciences, Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou

Další údaje

Jazyk

angličtina

Typ výsledku

Stať ve sborníku

Obor

10600 1.6 Biological sciences

Stát vydavatele

Čína

Utajení

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

Označené pro přenos do RIV

Ano

Kód RIV

RIV/00216224:14310/05:00020125

Organizační jednotka

Přírodovědecká fakulta

Klíčová slova anglicky

Dactylogyrus - Cyprinidae- molecular phylogeny - host specificity

Příznaky

Mezinárodní význam

Anotace

V originále

Dactylogyrus species represent a highly diversified parasite group restricted mainly to the fish species of Cyprinidae. A total of 51 Dactylogyrus species parasitizing 19 fish species belonging to the Cyprinidae and one fish species belonging to Percidae were analysed. Several aspects connected with the evolution of host specificity were investigated and tested: (1) host specificity is constrained by parasite phylogeny, (2) specialists evolve from generalists and many specialists arise from specialists, (3) specificity leads to species diversification, (4) the parasite attachment organ is connected with host specificity. Moreover, determinants of host specificity following the hypothesis of specialisation on more predictable resources (maximal host body size, longevity and abundance) were tested. Phylogenetic information obtained from molecular analysis of 18S rDNA and ITS1 of Dactylogyrus and cytochrome b of fish species were included in the analyses. Host specificity was expressed by (1) index of host specificity including phylogenetic and taxonomic relatedness of hosts, and (2) host range. Host specificity was constrained by parasite phylogeny but no significant contribution of host phylogeny was found. Being specialist was shown as an ancestral state for Dactylogyrus species and specificity was not associated with taxonomic diversification. Specialisation on more predictable resource was confirmed, i.e. longer lived fish are colonized by larger-body sized specialists. Specialists with larger anchors tend to live on longer lived and/or larger body sized fish species, which could be interpreted as a mechanism for optimizing the morphological adaptation. No morphometric association between generalist parasites and the traits of their preferred host (selected among all potential hosts colonized by a given generalist parasite) was found. Evolution of morphology of attachment organ is connected with host specificity and fish relatedness.

Česky

Dactylogyrus species represent a highly diversified parasite group restricted mainly to the fish species of Cyprinidae. A total of 51 Dactylogyrus species parasitizing 19 fish species belonging to the Cyprinidae and one fish species belonging to Percidae were analysed. Several aspects connected with the evolution of host specificity were investigated and tested: (1) host specificity is constrained by parasite phylogeny, (2) specialists evolve from generalists and many specialists arise from specialists, (3) specificity leads to species diversification, (4) the parasite attachment organ is connected with host specificity. Moreover, determinants of host specificity following the hypothesis of specialisation on more predictable resources (maximal host body size, longevity and abundance) were tested. Phylogenetic information obtained from molecular analysis of 18S rDNA and ITS1 of Dactylogyrus and cytochrome b of fish species were included in the analyses. Host specificity was expressed by (1) index of host specificity including phylogenetic and taxonomic relatedness of hosts, and (2) host range. Host specificity was constrained by parasite phylogeny but no significant contribution of host phylogeny was found. Being specialist was shown as an ancestral state for Dactylogyrus species and specificity was not associated with taxonomic diversification. Specialisation on more predictable resource was confirmed, i.e. longer lived fish are colonized by larger-body sized specialists. Specialists with larger anchors tend to live on longer lived and/or larger body sized fish species, which could be interpreted as a mechanism for optimizing the morphological adaptation. No morphometric association between generalist parasites and the traits of their preferred host (selected among all potential hosts colonized by a given generalist parasite) was found. Evolution of morphology of attachment organ is connected with host specificity and fish relatedness.

Návaznosti

GP524/03/P108, projekt VaV
Název: Evolučně-ekologické aspekty v systému parazit-hostitel
Investor: Grantová agentura ČR, Evolučně-ekologické aspekty v systému parazit-hostitel
MSM0021622416, záměr
Název: Diverzita biotických společenstev a populací: kauzální analýza variability v prostoru a čase
Investor: Ministerstvo školství, mládeže a tělovýchovy ČR, Diverzita biotických společenstev: kauzální analýza variability v prostoru a čase