Author:
Black Geoff A.,Lankester Murray W.
Abstract
The population biology of Cystidicola cristivomeri White, 1941 was investigated in lake trout, Salvelinus namaycush, in three lakes in northwestern Ontario and in arctic char, S. alpinus, in Gaviafaeces Lake, Northwest Territories. Young lake trout fed selectively on large Mysis relicta, which were more frequently infected with C. cristivomeri (up to 5.1%) than small mysids. Pontoporeia affinis was not a suitable intermediate host in nature and there was no evidence that fish paratenic hosts were important in transmitting this nematode to lake trout.Most C. cristivomeri appear to live at least 10 years in naturally infected lake trout and arctic char. In these fishes the size of C. cristivomeri infrapopulations is determined by several factors. The feeding preferences of fish hosts and the availability of forage in individual lakes determine the extent and duration of feeding on M. relicta. Each naturally infected mysid contains only one third-stage C. cristivomeri larva. In the swim bladder of infected fishes, the proportion of female C. cristivomeri reaching sexual maturity and the length of females is inversely related to the total number of worms present. The length of mature female worms, in turn, is positively correlated with the rate at which they produce eggs. As a result, the egg output of C. cristivomeri at the infrapopulation level is density dependent.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
19 articles.
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