4.3 Article

Structure of the metazoan parasite communities of haemulid fish (Actinopterygii: Perciformes) in the South Atlantic Ocean: a comparative approach

Journal

ANAIS DA ACADEMIA BRASILEIRA DE CIENCIAS
Volume 95, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

ACAD BRASILEIRA DE CIENCIAS
DOI: 10.1590/0001-3765202320220205

Keywords

Brazil; ecology; Haemulidae; marine fish; neotropical region; parasite community

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Haemulidae is a diverse and widespread family of Perciformes, mostly found in marine habitats. A study in the State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, analyzed the metazoan parasites of three species of Haemulidae. The study found that ectoparasites were most common in A. virginicus and Co. nobilis, while endoparasites were most common in O. rubra. The host species differed in abundance, richness, and diversity of parasites.
Haemulidae represents one of the most diverse, widespread and conspicuous families of Perciformes, in which most species are marine, some brackish and rarely from freshwater. From April 2009 to July 2012, 120 specimens of Conodon nobilis, 60 Orthopristis rubra and 50 Anisotremus virginicus were collected off the State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and analyzed for metazoan parasites. A total of 16 parasite taxa were found on/in A. virginicus, 19 on/in Co. nobilis and 21 on/in O. rubra, in which ectoparasites were most common on A. virginicus and Co. nobilis and endoparasites in O. rubra. All parasites showed aggregate pattern of distribution (discrepancy index values higher than 0.70). Mean abundance, species richness and Brillouin index (diversity) differed among the host species, i.e., O. rubra showed the highest values, followed by A. virginicus and Co. nobilis with intermediate and lowest values, respectively. At infracommunity level was possible to observe high similarity of parasite composition among the three host species. The digeneans Leurodera decora and Monorchis latus, and the acanthocephalan Koronacantha sp. represent new locality records off Brazil. Moreover, five, four and two taxa are reported, for the first time, parasitizing Co. nobilis, A. virginicus and O. rubra, respectively.

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