Abstract

In a tropical locality of Río La Antigua, Veracruz, Mexico, 11 fish species, represented by 244 individual fish from six freshwater fish families living sympatrically and synchronically, were examined for helminth parasites. A total of 36 taxa of helminths were recorded, 24 autogenic and 12 allogenic forms, including 6 monogeneans, 14 trematodes, 1 cestode, and 15 nematodes. Most helminth taxa were recovered for 10/11 of the component communities we analyzed. The results contribute empirical evidence that host specificity is an important force in the development of helminth communities of freshwater fishes. Each fish family has their own set of parasites, host species belonging to the same taxon share parasite species. High component community similarity among related host species was recorded, demonstrated by high prevalence and abundance, as well as dominance, of autogenic specialist species in each component community. Most autogenic helminth species are numerically and reproductively successful in relatively few host species. Autogenic helminths common in one host species are not common in others. Our findings give empirical support to the idea that low levels of sharing of parasites favor animal coexistence and high species richness, because large phylogenetic differences allow potentially competing animals to consume the same resources without being sensitive of another’s parasites.

Highlights

  • Host specificity strongly influences the biogeography of parasites

  • We recorded nine helminth species of Astyanax mexicanus and the analysis suggested than two more species should have been recorded

  • While 10 helminth species were recorded from Rhamdia guatemalensis and seven from Poecilia sphenops, the analysis suggested that at least one more species was missing from each host species to complete the inventory

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Summary

Introduction

Host specificity strongly influences the biogeography of parasites. This factor will determine the likelihood that a parasite will successfully invade a new habitat or adjust to new hosts following its arrival in new geographic areas [23, 26]. Each fish family commonly seems to have a set of parasites that are exclusive to and widely distributed in the host family, with limited host-sharing among them. Host specificity appears to be an important factor in the distribution of parasites, since the distribution of helminths reflects that of the fish families they parasitize [3, 29,30,31]. This concept is widely accepted; few if any investigations have been conducted in order to test this tenet in a given host assemblage

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