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Metacercarial Distribution of Centrocestus formosanus among Fish Hosts in the Guadalupe River Drainage of Texas
Author(s) -
Fleming B. Paul,
Huffman David G.,
Bonner Timothy H.,
Brandt Thomas M.
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of aquatic animal health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.507
H-Index - 52
eISSN - 1548-8667
pISSN - 0899-7659
DOI - 10.1080/08997659.2011.616840
Subject(s) - biology , minnow , tributary , intermediate host , ecology , sucker , margaritifera , host (biology) , parasite hosting , population , snail , fish <actinopterygii> , zoology , fishery , geography , demography , cartography , mussel , sociology , world wide web , computer science
Abstract We examined the gills of wild fish collected from central Texas for Centrocestus formosanus metacercariae to determine whether this temperature‐restricted parasite had invaded the thermally dynamic Guadalupe River via an introduced population in its thermally stable tributary, the Comal River. We collected fish from three sites in the Guadalupe River near its confluence with the Comal River (upstream, at, and downstream) and one site in the Comal River. Centrocestus formosanus infected 14 of the 25 species examined (56.0%) and 171 of the individual fish (27.1%). Several of the infected fish represent new host records for the parasite, and two are listed as species of special concern by the state of Texas. Mean metacercarial intensities varied from 8 to 616 among species, and the highest recorded intensity was greater than 800 in two Guadalupe roundnose minnow Dionda nigrotaeniata . Among the 24 species examined from the Guadalupe River, 11 (45.8%) were infected with C. formosanus . Thorough surveys at the study sites yielded no living specimens of the first obligate intermediate snail host (red‐rim melania Melanoides tuberculatus ), which must be present to perpetuate the parasite. Thus, the infections were probably due to drifting cercariae that had been shed into the water column upstream of the study area in the Comal River. We therefore investigated spatial patterns in cercarial acquisition using caged fish to determine whether drifting cercariae were present in the water column at the study sites. Of 57 uninfected blacktail shiners Cyprinella venusta exposed to Guadalupe River water downstream from and at the confluence, 52 (91.2%) became infected with C. formosanus metacercariae at a mean rate of 4 metacercariae/d. This finding extends the known geographic range of this invasive exotic parasite and is the first report of the life cycle being advanced in the fish assemblage of a thermally variable temperate stream in the USA. Received October 18, 2010; accepted April 7, 2011