4.0 Article

Copepod crustaceans parasitizing marine fish of the Kerala coast, India

Journal

ARTHROPODA SELECTA
Volume 28, Issue 4, Pages 529-544

Publisher

KMK SCIENTIFIC PRESS LTD, MOSCOW STATE UNIV
DOI: 10.15298/arthsel.28.4.05

Keywords

parasitic copepod; Siphonostomatoida; Cyclopoida; fish; Kerala; India

Categories

Funding

  1. DST-SERB research project [EMR/2016/001163/AS]
  2. DST-RFBR collaborative research project [INT/RUS/RFBR/P-330]
  3. DST [DST/INSPIRE Fellowship/2017/IF170696]
  4. RFBR [18-54-45016 IND_a]

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Copepods parasitizing marine fish were collected along the Cochin and Malabar coasts (Kerala, India) of the Indian Ocean from July 2013 through February 2019. One hundred species of copepods from 31 genera in eight families, were found living on 85 species fish represented 65 genera in 34 families. Copepods of the order Siphonostomatoida were the dominant parasites; they belonged to five families (Caligidae, Lernaeopodidae, Lernanthropidae, Pennellidae, and Pseudocycnidae), of which Caligidae and Lernanthropidae were the most diverse, comprising 29 species each (in eight and five genera, respectively). The genera Caligus and Lernanthropus, with 20 and 21 species, respectively, are the most diverse genera of siphonostomatoid copepods. All 26 species in nine genera of the poecilostome cyclopoids belong to the families Bomolochidae, Chondracanthidae and Ergasilidae. The great diversity of parasitic copepods living on fish suggests a need for a more thorough integrative study of the diversity, host specificity and ecology of these copepods, not only from fish along the Kerala coasts, but also along the other coasts of India.

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