Abstract

Samples of Eubothrium parvum were obtained from capelin Mallotus villosus at 55 stations throughout the Barents Sea and from Balsfjord, North Norway. The parasite is distributed widely throughout the Barents Sea, but both incidence and intensity of infection are higher in the regions off Murmansk and the Kola peninsula, and Spitsbergen. E. parvum exhibits a seasonal peak in maturation and probably also in acquisition of new infections. The incidence of infection is greatest in 1 + fish, whereas the intensity is more independent of host age. It is suggested that the parasite requires only a single intermediate host, a plank‐tonic copepod, and its distribution in relation to age of host is a reflection of the dietary preference shown by young capelin for copepods. The frequency distribution of E. parvum in capelin was over‐dispersed in Balsfjord, where infection levels of between 1 and 28 parasites per fish were encountered in all samples, but under‐dispersed in the Barents Sea, where infections of more than four parasites per fish were never found and even infections with three and four parasites were very local. It is suggested that the underdispersion is due to a very low probability of infection in the open waters of the sea. Although the presence of E. parvum cannot be used as a biological tag for capelin, its abundance and frequency distribution can. The difference in frequency distribution and the failure to find any heavily infected fish in the Barents Sea confirm the suggestion that the capelin of Balsfjord form a local isolated population, which does not migrate into the Barents Sea. The differences in infection levels within the Barents Sea suggest the further possibility that there are at least two stocks of capelin there, but this requires further investigation and confirmation.

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