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Why ignoring parasites in fish ecology is a mistake

期刊

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR PARASITOLOGY
卷 50, 期 10-11, 页码 755-761

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2020.04.007

关键词

Fish ecology; Parasites; Confounding effects; Biomarkers

资金

  1. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas, Argentina [112-201501-00973]
  2. Fondo para la Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnologica, Argentina [2013]
  3. Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata, Argentina [EXA 915/18]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Parasites are ubiquitous components of biological systems that have evolved in multiple independent lineages during the history of life, resulting in a diversity of taxa greater than that of their free-living counterparts. Extant host-parasite associations are the result of tight reciprocal adaptations that allow parasites to exploit specific biological features of their hosts to ensure their transmission, survival, and maintenance of viable populations. As a result, parasites may affect host physiology, morphology, reproduction or behaviour, and they are increasingly recognized as having significant impacts on host individuals, populations, communities and even ecosystems. Although this is usually acknowledged by parasite ecologists, fish ecologists often ignore parasitism in their studies, often acting as though their systems are free of parasites. However, the effects of parasites on their hosts can alter variables routinely used in fish ecology, ranging from the level of individual fish (e.g. condition factors) to populations (e.g. estimates of mortality and reproductive success) or communities (e.g. measures of interspecific competition or the structure and functioning of food webs). By affecting fish physiology, parasites can also interfere with measurements of trophic levels by means of stable isotope composition, or have antagonistic or synergistic effects with host parameters normally used as indicators of different sources of pollution. Changes in host behaviour induced by parasites can also modify host distribution patterns, habitat selection, diet composition, sexual behaviour, etc., with implications for the ecology of fish and of their predators and prey. In this review, we summarise and illustrate the likely biases and erroneous conclusions that one may expect from studies of fish ecology that ignore parasites, from the individual to the community level. Given the impact of parasites across all levels of biological organisation, we show that their omission from the design and analyses of ecological studies poses real risks of flawed interpretations for those patterns and processes that ecologists seek to uncover. (C) 2020 Australian Society for Parasitology. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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