Author:
Brattey John,Clark Kirsten J.
Abstract
Eggs of the parasitic nematode Anisakis simplex B, obtained from a white-beaked dolphin (Lagenorhynchus albirostris Gray), were incubated in seawater at constant temperatures from −0.7 to 24.3 °C and hatching times determined. Eggs hatched at all temperatures except −0.7 °C. The number of days until hatching ranged from 3 at 24.3 °C to 74–81 at 1.9 °C. There was a declining curvilinear relationship between temperature and both hatching time and duration of the hatching period. The hatching period increased and became more variable with decreasing temperature and ranged from 5 days at 24.3 °C to 55–72 days at 3.8 °C. The percentage of eggs that hatched at each temperature was variable but generally fell in the range 30–60% and was not correlated with temperature. Survival times of hatched larvae peaked at 75–105 days at 8.6 °C, with a minimum of 3–8 days at 24.3 °C. Dimensions of eggs (length, width, volume) differed significantly among individual worms but were not correlated with worm size (wet weight). Egg hatching and larval survival characteristics indicate a species adapted to cold-temperate waters and are consistent with the known distribution of A. simplex B. Preliminary experiments indicated that harpacticoid copepods will ingest newly hatched larvae of A. simplex B and become infected, suggesting that these microcrustaceans may be involved in the life cycle of the nematode.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
14 articles.
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