Leeches, Lice and Lampreys: A Natural History of Skin and Gill Parasites of Fishes

Couverture
Springer Science & Business Media, 5 nov. 2007 - 432 pages

Many different kinds of animals have adopted a parasitic life style on the skin and gills of marine and freshwater fishes, including protozoans, flatworms, leeches, a range of crustaceans and even some vertebrates (lampreys). There is a parasitic barnacle, described first in the 19th century by Charles Darwin, fish lice that change sex and bivalve molluscs parasitic only when young. This book explores for the first time in one volume, the remarkable biology of these little known and frequently bizarre animals.

The following closely interwoven themes are considered for each group of parasites: how they find their hosts, how they attach, feed and reproduce, the damage they inflict and how the host’s immune system retaliates. Based on the British fauna, but extending where appropriate to examples from North America, Australia and elsewhere, the book is essential reading, not just for the professional parasitologist, but also for anyone interested in fishes and in this neglected field of British natural history.

With the enquiring naturalist in mind, terms and concepts are explained as they arise, backed up by a glossary, and the text is liberally illustrated. An introductory chapter on fish biology sets the scene and common fish names are used throughout, as well as scientific names.

 

Table des matières

Monogenean flatworm skin parasites Entobdella
37
Other monogenean skin parasites
61
Monogenean gill parasites monopisthocotyleans
82
Monogenean gill parasites polyopisthocotyleans
103
Leeches
131
xvii
154
2 pennellids
178
3 lernaeopodids
195
22
324
Conclusions
339
27
347
Classified list of fishes with common and scientific names
353
Classified list of genera of epizoic and parasitic invertebrates
361
References 375
374
28
376
32
384

Cyclopoid copepods the anchor worm
208
Poecilostomatoid copepods
214
The common fish louse Argulus
237
A mesoparasitic barnacle Anelasma
265
Isopods
274
Unionacean molluscs naiads
296
Lampreys
318

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Expressions et termes fréquents

Fréquemment cités

Page viii - There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being evolved.
Page 394 - Kabata, Z. (1974). Mouth and mode of feeding of Caligidae (Copepoda), parasites of fishes, as determined by light and scanning electron microscopy.
Page 380 - The cell kinetics of teleost fish epidermis: epidermal mitotic activity in relation to wound healing at varying temperatures in plaice (Pleuronectes platessa).
Page 400 - Llewellyn, J. (1984). The biology of Isancistrum subulatae n. sp., a monogenean parasitic on the squid, Alloteuthis subulata, at Plymouth. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 64: 285-302. Llewellyn, J.
Page 400 - Llewellyn, J. & Tully, CM (1969) A comparison of speciation in diclidophorinean monogenean gill parasites and in their fish hosts.
Page 400 - Green, JE (1980). Host-specificity and speciation in diclidophoran (monogenean) gill parasites of trisopteran (gadoid) fishes at Plymouth. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 60: 73 - 79.
Page 389 - Species of Gyrodactylus von Nordmann, 1832 (Monogenea: Gyrodactylidae) from freshwater fishes in southern England, with a description of Gyrodactylus rogatensis sp. nov. from the bullhead Cottus gobio L. Journal of Natural History 19, 791 - 809.
Page 400 - Owen, IL (1960) The attachment of the monogenean Discocotyle sagittata Leuckart to the gills of Salmo trutta L. Parasitology, 50, 51-59.

Informations bibliographiques