Author:
KENNEDY C. R.,HARTVIGSEN R. A.
Abstract
The hypothesis that intestinal helminth communities in freshwater brown trout are dissimilar in composition and structure
to those in the European eel was tested by an analysis of component communities from 72 localities and of infracommunities
from 34 localities in the British Isles and Norway. Derived indices were then compared with published data from eels.
Composition of helminth communities differed considerably between the two hosts as a group of 4 species occurred
commonly in trout and so gave greater predictability to the community composition. These 4 species were trout specialists
and in 97% of the localities a trout specialist dominated the community rather than a generalist acanthocephalan as is
typical for eels. By contrast all measures of community structure and indices of richness and diversity indicated that
helminth communities in trout were isolationist in character, species poor and exhibited low diversity at both component
and infracommunity levels. All values of indices for trout helminth communities were strikingly similar to those obtained
from eels. Evidence of interspecific interactions within the trout helminth communities and a limit of 4 to infracommunity
species richness further enhanced the similarities and suggested a common determinant of community structure. The
hypothesis was thus supported in respect of species composition but refuted in respect of community structure.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
37 articles.
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