Abstract

The prevalence and mean intensity of metazoan parasite infection, the community characteristics (richness index, dominance index, evenness index and Shannon index of diversity) and the qualitative similarity of the metazoan parasite fauna among the species and families of the fishes were determined of 13 fish species of freshwater fishes of Kerala belonging to seven families. The metazoan parasite fauna of this geographical area is very diverse; it consisted of 33 species of parasites belonging to seven major taxa: ten species of Monogenea, nine Digenea, two Cestoda, six Nematoda, three Acanthocephala, two Copepoda and one Isopoda. Prevalence of infection ranged from 32.9% (Puntius vittatus) to 87.1% (Mystus oculatus) and mean intensity from 3.8 (Puntius vittatus) to 27.6 (Aplocheilus lineatus). The infra- and component communities of parasites were somewhat characteristic. The dominance pattern of the major taxa was in the order Digenea>Nematoda>Monogenea=Acanthocephala>Cestoda=Copepoda>Isopoda. Macropodus cupanusharboured the richest fauna and Puntius vittatushad the least rich fauna. The parasite fauna of A. lineatus was the most heterogeneous and that of M. cavasius, the most homogeneous. The diversity of the parasite fauna was the greatest in M. cavasius and the least in A. lineatus. The parasite faunas of A. lineatus and M. cupanus and of M. cavasius and M. oculatus were similar. However, in spite of the taxonomic nearness and the similarity of the habits and habitats of the four species of cyprinids (P. amphibius, P. filamentosus, P. sarana and P. vittatus), their parasite fauna were qualitatively very dissimilar-of the seven species of parasites encountered in them only one was shared by the four host species. The cyprinid, Rasbora daniconius, had its own characteristic component community of parasites consisting of six species none of which was shared by the other four cyprinids. The richest parasite fauna was that of the family Cyprinidae followed by that of Channidae and the poorest of Belonidae. The most homogeneous parasite fauna was that of Bagridae and the most heterogeneous that of Cyprinodontidae. The parasite fauna of Cyprinodontidae and Belontidae were qualitatively very similar. The results indicate that the freshwater fishes of the southwest cost of India harbour a rich and diverse metazoan parasite fauna, which is as rich and diverse as that of the marine fishes of this area. The results also suggest that carnivorous/omnivorous fish species harbour richer and more heterogeneous component communities of parasites than herbivorous species implying that the feeding habits of fishes is a major factor deciding their parasite faunas.

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