Contracaecum osculatum (sensu lato) infection of Gadus morhua in the Baltic Sea: inter- and intraspecific interactions

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Standard

Contracaecum osculatum (sensu lato) infection of Gadus morhua in the Baltic Sea : inter- and intraspecific interactions. / Mohamed, Abdu; Zuo, Shaozhi; Karami, Asma M.; Marnis, Huria; Setyawan, Agung; Mehrdana, Foojan; Kirkeby, Carsten; Kania, Per; Buchmann, Kurt.

I: International Journal for Parasitology, Bind 50, Nr. 10-11, 2020, s. 891-898.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Mohamed, A, Zuo, S, Karami, AM, Marnis, H, Setyawan, A, Mehrdana, F, Kirkeby, C, Kania, P & Buchmann, K 2020, 'Contracaecum osculatum (sensu lato) infection of Gadus morhua in the Baltic Sea: inter- and intraspecific interactions', International Journal for Parasitology, bind 50, nr. 10-11, s. 891-898. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpara.2020.06.003

APA

Mohamed, A., Zuo, S., Karami, A. M., Marnis, H., Setyawan, A., Mehrdana, F., Kirkeby, C., Kania, P., & Buchmann, K. (2020). Contracaecum osculatum (sensu lato) infection of Gadus morhua in the Baltic Sea: inter- and intraspecific interactions. International Journal for Parasitology, 50(10-11), 891-898. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpara.2020.06.003

Vancouver

Mohamed A, Zuo S, Karami AM, Marnis H, Setyawan A, Mehrdana F o.a. Contracaecum osculatum (sensu lato) infection of Gadus morhua in the Baltic Sea: inter- and intraspecific interactions. International Journal for Parasitology. 2020;50(10-11):891-898. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpara.2020.06.003

Author

Mohamed, Abdu ; Zuo, Shaozhi ; Karami, Asma M. ; Marnis, Huria ; Setyawan, Agung ; Mehrdana, Foojan ; Kirkeby, Carsten ; Kania, Per ; Buchmann, Kurt. / Contracaecum osculatum (sensu lato) infection of Gadus morhua in the Baltic Sea : inter- and intraspecific interactions. I: International Journal for Parasitology. 2020 ; Bind 50, Nr. 10-11. s. 891-898.

Bibtex

@article{67ac2a34359f41239e4b0331a65f7f95,
title = "Contracaecum osculatum (sensu lato) infection of Gadus morhua in the Baltic Sea: inter- and intraspecific interactions",
abstract = "The subpopulation of Atlantic cod, Gadus morhua, in the eastern part of the Baltic Sea has experienced a significant increase in infections with anisakid nematode larvae of the species Contracaecum osculatum sensu lato (s.l.) since the year 2000. The life cycle of the parasite includes seals and especially the grey seal, Halichoerus grypus, as final hosts, carrying the adult nematodes in the stomach, crustaceans (copepods, amphipods) as first intermediate hosts and various fish species (clupeids, sandeel) including cod as second intermediate/paratenic hosts. Cod with a body length below 28 cm are generally non-infected but experience increasing infection levels when they switch to a piscine diet (infected intermediate/paratenic hosts). We present an overall frequency distribution analysis of worms in 166 cod (body length 30–49 cm) collected in the spawning area over the last 5 years. It shows a fit to the negative binomial distribution, a prevalence of infection of 89.8%, a mean intensity of 29.3 parasites per fish (range 1–377) and a variance/mean ratio of 59.2 (≫1), indicating overdispersion. We present measurements of the adult Contracaecum osculatum (s.l.) specimens in the seal stomach and show that the parasites reach a maximum length of 6.6 cm (females) and 5.8 cm (males). L3s in sprat have a total length from 1to 11 mm whereas the larvae in cod liver are 3–27 mm. A decreasing mean worm length associated with high worm densities in cod (number of nematodes per liver) was recorded. Possible explanations might include timing of feeding on infected intermediate/paratenic hosts, intraspecific competition (crowding) between larvae in cod and host responses (indicated by a significant antibody production in cod against C. osculatum (s.l.) antigens). A significant negative correlation between infection intensity and muscle mass of cod was found, suggesting parasite-induced down-regulation of growth factors in cod.",
keywords = "Baltic Sea, Cod, Contracaecum osculatum, Gadus morhua, Host-parasite interactions, Nematoda",
author = "Abdu Mohamed and Shaozhi Zuo and Karami, {Asma M.} and Huria Marnis and Agung Setyawan and Foojan Mehrdana and Carsten Kirkeby and Per Kania and Kurt Buchmann",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1016/j.ijpara.2020.06.003",
language = "English",
volume = "50",
pages = "891--898",
journal = "International Journal for Parasitology",
issn = "0020-7519",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "10-11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Contracaecum osculatum (sensu lato) infection of Gadus morhua in the Baltic Sea

T2 - inter- and intraspecific interactions

AU - Mohamed, Abdu

AU - Zuo, Shaozhi

AU - Karami, Asma M.

AU - Marnis, Huria

AU - Setyawan, Agung

AU - Mehrdana, Foojan

AU - Kirkeby, Carsten

AU - Kania, Per

AU - Buchmann, Kurt

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - The subpopulation of Atlantic cod, Gadus morhua, in the eastern part of the Baltic Sea has experienced a significant increase in infections with anisakid nematode larvae of the species Contracaecum osculatum sensu lato (s.l.) since the year 2000. The life cycle of the parasite includes seals and especially the grey seal, Halichoerus grypus, as final hosts, carrying the adult nematodes in the stomach, crustaceans (copepods, amphipods) as first intermediate hosts and various fish species (clupeids, sandeel) including cod as second intermediate/paratenic hosts. Cod with a body length below 28 cm are generally non-infected but experience increasing infection levels when they switch to a piscine diet (infected intermediate/paratenic hosts). We present an overall frequency distribution analysis of worms in 166 cod (body length 30–49 cm) collected in the spawning area over the last 5 years. It shows a fit to the negative binomial distribution, a prevalence of infection of 89.8%, a mean intensity of 29.3 parasites per fish (range 1–377) and a variance/mean ratio of 59.2 (≫1), indicating overdispersion. We present measurements of the adult Contracaecum osculatum (s.l.) specimens in the seal stomach and show that the parasites reach a maximum length of 6.6 cm (females) and 5.8 cm (males). L3s in sprat have a total length from 1to 11 mm whereas the larvae in cod liver are 3–27 mm. A decreasing mean worm length associated with high worm densities in cod (number of nematodes per liver) was recorded. Possible explanations might include timing of feeding on infected intermediate/paratenic hosts, intraspecific competition (crowding) between larvae in cod and host responses (indicated by a significant antibody production in cod against C. osculatum (s.l.) antigens). A significant negative correlation between infection intensity and muscle mass of cod was found, suggesting parasite-induced down-regulation of growth factors in cod.

AB - The subpopulation of Atlantic cod, Gadus morhua, in the eastern part of the Baltic Sea has experienced a significant increase in infections with anisakid nematode larvae of the species Contracaecum osculatum sensu lato (s.l.) since the year 2000. The life cycle of the parasite includes seals and especially the grey seal, Halichoerus grypus, as final hosts, carrying the adult nematodes in the stomach, crustaceans (copepods, amphipods) as first intermediate hosts and various fish species (clupeids, sandeel) including cod as second intermediate/paratenic hosts. Cod with a body length below 28 cm are generally non-infected but experience increasing infection levels when they switch to a piscine diet (infected intermediate/paratenic hosts). We present an overall frequency distribution analysis of worms in 166 cod (body length 30–49 cm) collected in the spawning area over the last 5 years. It shows a fit to the negative binomial distribution, a prevalence of infection of 89.8%, a mean intensity of 29.3 parasites per fish (range 1–377) and a variance/mean ratio of 59.2 (≫1), indicating overdispersion. We present measurements of the adult Contracaecum osculatum (s.l.) specimens in the seal stomach and show that the parasites reach a maximum length of 6.6 cm (females) and 5.8 cm (males). L3s in sprat have a total length from 1to 11 mm whereas the larvae in cod liver are 3–27 mm. A decreasing mean worm length associated with high worm densities in cod (number of nematodes per liver) was recorded. Possible explanations might include timing of feeding on infected intermediate/paratenic hosts, intraspecific competition (crowding) between larvae in cod and host responses (indicated by a significant antibody production in cod against C. osculatum (s.l.) antigens). A significant negative correlation between infection intensity and muscle mass of cod was found, suggesting parasite-induced down-regulation of growth factors in cod.

KW - Baltic Sea

KW - Cod

KW - Contracaecum osculatum

KW - Gadus morhua

KW - Host-parasite interactions

KW - Nematoda

U2 - 10.1016/j.ijpara.2020.06.003

DO - 10.1016/j.ijpara.2020.06.003

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 32681931

AN - SCOPUS:85088809131

VL - 50

SP - 891

EP - 898

JO - International Journal for Parasitology

JF - International Journal for Parasitology

SN - 0020-7519

IS - 10-11

ER -

ID: 247150485