Abstract

BackgroundWildlife repatriation represents an opportunity for parasites. Reintroduced hosts are expected to accumulate generalist parasites via spillover from reservoir hosts, whereas colonization with specialist parasites is unlikely. We address the question of how myxozoan parasites, which are characterized by a complex life-cycle alternating between annelids and fish, can invade a reintroduced fish species and determine the impact of a de novo invasion on parasite diversity. We investigated the case of the anadromous allis shad, Alosa alosa (L.), which was reintroduced into the Rhine approximately 70 years after its extinction in this river system.MethodsWe studied parasites belonging to the Myxozoa (Cnidaria) in 196 allis shad from (i) established populations in the French rivers Garonne and Dordogne and (ii) repatriated populations in the Rhine, by screening the first adults returning to spawn in 2014. Following microscopical detection of myxozoan infections general myxozoan primers were used for SSU rDNA amplification and sequencing. Phylogenetic analyses were performed and cloned sequences were analyzed from individuals of different water sources to better understand the diversity and population structure of myxozoan isolates in long-term coexisting vs recently established host-parasite systems.ResultsWe describe Hoferellus alosae n. sp. from the renal tubules of allis shad by use of morphological and molecular methods. A species-specific PCR assay determined that the prevalence of H. alosae n. sp. is 100 % in sexually mature fish in the Garonne/Dordogne river systems and 22 % in the first mature shad returning to spawn in the Rhine. The diversity of SSU rDNA clones of the parasite was up to four times higher in the Rhine and lacked a site-specific signature of SNPs such as in the French rivers. A second myxozoan, Ortholinea sp., was detected exclusively in allis shad from the Rhine.ConclusionsOur data demonstrate that the de novo establishment of myxozoan infections in rivers is slow but of great genetic diversity, which can only be explained by the introduction of spores from genetically diverse sources, predominantly via straying fish or by migratory piscivorous birds. Long-term studies will show if and how the high diversity of a de novo introduction of host-specific myxozoans succeeds into the establishment of a local successful strain in vertebrate and invertebrate hosts.Graphical Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13071-016-1760-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Wildlife repatriation represents an opportunity for parasites

  • Residential populations of allis shad were likewise extinct in the Rhine ecosystem by the middle of the 20th Century [4, 5] until their repatriation in the course of the European Union -L’Instrument Financier pour l’Environnement (EU-LIFE) project “The reintroduction of Allis shad (Alosa alosa) in the Rhine system” (2007–2010) and the follow-on EU-LIFE+ project “Conservation and Restoration of the Allis shad in the Gironde and Rhine watersheds” (2011–2015)

  • We describe Hoferellus alosae n. sp. from Alosa alosa and investigate parasite SSU Small subunit ribosomal deoxyribonucleic acid (rDNA) clone diversity in established host-parasite populations in the Dordogne/Garonne watershed and in the first infected hosts returning to the Rhine system for spawning

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Summary

Introduction

Wildlife repatriation represents an opportunity for parasites. Reintroduced hosts are expected to accumulate generalist parasites via spillover from reservoir hosts, whereas colonization with specialist parasites is unlikely. The allis shad, Alosa alosa (L.) is an anadromous clupeid fish whose original distribution covered the area from the coast of southern Scandinavia to that of northwestern Africa This species has a pelagic marine existence but upon maturation (4 to 6 years) migrates to spawn in the higher middle watercourse of rivers [1]. Residential populations of allis shad were likewise extinct in the Rhine ecosystem by the middle of the 20th Century [4, 5] until their repatriation in the course of the EU-LIFE project “The reintroduction of Allis shad (Alosa alosa) in the Rhine system” (2007–2010) and the follow-on EU-LIFE+ project “Conservation and Restoration of the Allis shad in the Gironde and Rhine watersheds” (2011–2015) Within these projects, allis shad brood stock from a natural population in France were spawned in captivity and 10.66 million larvae reared in aquaculture facilities were released into the Rhine system, between 2008 and 2014 [6, 7]. Adult shad first returned to spawn in the Rhine six years after the release of larvae in these waters [7]

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