Abstract

Previously undescribed motile cystophorous cercariae which develop in sporocyst-like germinal sacs in the bullomorph opisthobranch Philine aperta are experimentally shown to develop into Lecithocladium excisum (Digenea, Hemiuridae), a common stomach parasite of mackerel Scomber scombrus in the north-east Atlantic and adjacent seas. Between 3 and 8% of P. aperta from the northern Øresund, Denmark, were infected with cercariae of L. excisum. Ninety per cent were infected with Rhopalura sp. (Orthonectida). Copepods of the genera Acartia, Paracalanus, Pseudocalanus, Eurytemora and Oithona were experimentally infected. Pressure exerted by their mouth limbs caused delivery tube eversion and the injection of the eercarial body into the copepod haemocoel. The metacercariae did not grow in the above mentioned hosts at 12°C, but 590 μm long metacercariae developed within 22 days in laboratory-reared A. tonsa at 18°C. The ctenophore Pleurobrachia pileus and the holoplanktonic polychaete Tomopteris helgolandica, which were found to be naturally infected with metacercariae of L. excisum, may act as transport hosts.

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