4.6 Article

Could Fish Feeding Behaviour and Size Explain Prevalence Differences of the Nematode Eustrongylides excisus among Species? The Case Study of Lake Garda

Journal

WATER
Volume 13, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w13243581

Keywords

food-borne zoonoses; Perca fluviatilis; Lepomis gibossus; Micropterus salmoides; trophic level

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Health [IZS PLV 18/14 RC]

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The study investigated the parasitism of Eustrongylides excisus in freshwater fish in Lake Garda, Italy, and found significant differences in prevalence values among different fish species. Piscivorous fish species were more likely to be positive for E. excisus, with the highest prevalence in Micropterus salmoides. Additionally, a negative correlation between body size and E. excisus was observed in Perca fluviatilis, which mainly feeds on zooplankton and benthic invertebrates.
The nematode Eustrongylides excisus is a parasite of freshwater fish- and fish-eating birds, with known differences on prevalence values among fish species. Thus, the present study aims to explore the hypothesis that the feeding behavior and the size of fish belonging to different trophic levels could explain such differences. For that, 14 sampling sites were selected to perform a fish parasitological survey on Lake Garda (Italy) during spring-summer 2020. Amplification of nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) rDNA sequences of nematodes morphologically ascribable to the genus Eustrongylides allowed to identify them as E. excisus. From the five studied fish species (Perca fluviatilis, Lepomis gibbous, Coregonus lavaretus, Alosa fallax lacustris and Micropterus salmoides), only three presented the parasite E. excisus: P. fluviatilis, L. gibbous and M. salmoides, with significant differences in prevalence values among species (p = 0.002). Additionally, there were differences in prevalence values within the same fish species captured from different sampling sites. Findings showed that mainly piscivorous fish were positive for E. excisus and how the prevalence was highest in M. salmoides. As regard the fish size, a negative correlation between body size and E. excisus was found in P. fluviatilis due to the feeding habit of juvenile perch which feed mainly zooplankton and benthic invertebrates (i.e., oligochaetes, which are the first intermediate hosts of E. excisus). The study findings advance novel knowledge in the field of pathogens of zoonotic importance in the aquatic environment.

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