4.2 Article

Effects of metacercariae of Prosorhynchoides sp. (Trematoda: Bucephalidae) on the swimming ability and blood parameters of the intertidal fish Girella laevifrons (Osteichthyes: Kyphosidae)

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL PARASITOLOGY
Volume 246, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.exppara.2023.108473

Keywords

Digeneans; Experimental infestation; Aerobic swimming; Fixed swim speed test; Haematology

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This study compared the swimming ability and haematological analyses between non-parasitised and parasitised Girella laevifrons fish. The results showed that parasitised fish had lower swimming ability, indicating anemia and immune response. There was a negative correlation between swimming time and leukocyte counts. However, as time passed, the blood parameters of parasitised fish gradually returned to normal levels.
Parasites may have various effects on their host's health. It is important to determine the type of the effects but also to decipher the physiological mechanisms underlying a parasitic infection. In this study, swimming ability (by a fixed swim speed test) and haematological analyses (by blood parameters) were compared between ju-venile fish Girella laevifrons non-parasitised and parasitised with metacercariae of Prosorhynchoides sp. Fish were infested in the laboratory using natural parasitised mussels. Aerobic swimming time, total erythrocyte and leukocyte counts were compared among four groups of fish: non-parasitised (NP), non-parasitised but manipu-lated (NPM), parasitised 3 days (PT1), and 10 days (PT2) post-infection. Differentiated haematological com-ponents were also compared among NP, PT1 and PT2 fish groups. Parasitised fish (PT1 and PT2) swam between 32% and 55% less time than unparasitised fish. Erythrocyte counts were lower in PT1, indicating anemia, and total leukocyte counts were higher in PT1, showing immune action. Macrophages and basophils were observed only in parasitised fish, independent of the post-infection time. There was a negative correlation between swimming time and leukocyte counts. Increased leukocytes in the blood indicate activation of the innate cellular immune response, which may be metabolically costly for the host. Moreover, the anemia in parasitised fish would reduce the oxygen transport necessary to carry out aerobic exercise, reducing the swimming capacity. In fish several days post-infection (PT2), the erythrocytes count reached normal values, and some kinds of leuko-cytes decreased in comparison to fish PT1. This suggests that parasitised fish with metacercariae were recovering.

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