Abstract

Simple SummaryParasites exhibiting close associations with their hosts may represent a useful tool when investigating historical biogeography, especially in the case of hosts associated with a once contiguous landmass. Host-specific gill parasites (Monogenea) were applied as a supplementary tool to reveal the historical biogeographical contacts between freshwater fish from North America and Europe and their contemporary contacts in North America. Cyprinoidei is the most species-rich lineage of cypriniform fish with Leuciscidae exhibiting a Holarctic distribution. Monogenean parasites of the genus Dactylogyrus are mostly restricted to this freshwater fish group, and the high species diversity of Dactylogyrus follows the high diversity of their cyprinoid fish hosts. Using a phylogenetic approach, two Nearctic clades of Dactylogyrus spp. with different origins were revealed indicating two different historical routes of cyprinoid dispersion to the North American continent. Our study showed that the historical contacts between European and North American leuciscids were accompanied by the host switching of gill monogeneans. The phylogenetic relationships among North American Dactylogyrus spp. indicated numerous colonizations of cypriniform fish resulting from ancient paleogeographic events and contemporary drainage reorganization, thereby, facilitating contacts among phylogenetically distant fish species.Host-specific parasites exhibit close co-evolutionary associations with their hosts. In the case of fragmented/disjunct host distribution, host-specific parasites may reflect the biogeographical history of regions and/or the role played by contacts of hosts. The present study was focused on Dactylogyrus (Monogenea) species almost exclusively parasitizing cyprinoid fishes. We investigated the phylogenetic relationships between Dactylogyrus parasites of Nearctic cyprinoids (Leuciscidae) and Dactylogyrus parasites of Palearctic cyprinoids and used Dactylogyrus phylogeny to explore the biogeography of fish hosts in Europe and North America. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that two Nearctic clades of Dactylogyrus spp. have different origins. Historical contacts between European and North American leuciscids were accompanied by the host switching of Dactylogyrus species. In the Nearctic region, Dactylogyrus parasites also colonized non-leuciscid fishes. Dactylogyrus spp. of three Nearctic leuciscid clades were included in the phylogenetic reconstruction; only Dactylogyrus spp. of the Plagopterinae had a common origin. Dactylogyrus species did not reflect the phylogenetic relationships among leuciscid clades, suggesting that past co-diversification was overshadowed by colonization events mediated by paleogeographic and climatological changes and extensive drainage reorganization. Host-specific monogeneans serve as a supplementary tool to reveal the historical biogeographical contacts between freshwater fish from the North America and Europe and also contemporary contacts of leuciscids in North America.

Highlights

  • Parasites are considered useful indicators of contemporary and historical ecology and biogeography on varying temporal and spatial scales [1,2]

  • In view of the demonstrated fact that host-specific Dactylogyrus parasites represent useful indicators of biogeographical contacts among cyprinoids, we focused on Dactylogyrus spp. parasitizing leuciscids of the Nearctic region and the European part of the Palearctic region

  • The richness of Dactylogyrus species on the fish investigated was very low; eight fish species were parasitized by a single Dactylogyrus species, and five fish species were parasitized by two Dactylogyrus species

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Summary

Introduction

Parasites are considered useful indicators of contemporary and historical ecology and biogeography on varying temporal and spatial scales [1,2]. They reveal processes involved in diversification and the formation of ecosystems and provide insights about the history and structure of faunal associations in evolutionary and ecological time [1,3,4]. Monogeneans are parasitic flatworms (Plathyhelminthes) with monoxenous life cycles (involving a single host), mostly infecting the gills and fins of fish They are highly diverse in terms of species richness [5], morphology (various forms of the sclerotized parts of attachment and reproductive organs) and ecology (host and microhabitat specificities) [6,7,8,9,10]

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