Abstract

In view of the known importance of anthropochore movements of fish in disseminating their parasites, it was hypothesized that local movements of fish between neighbouring water bodies for stocking and management purposes would similarly disseminate their parasites, resulting in a high degree of similarity in the parasite communities of fish in water bodies that have been linked by fish transfers. This hypothesis was tested by comparing the helminth parasite communities in brown trout, Salmo trutta Linnaeus and rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss (Walbaum), in reservoirs in south west England. In one group of six reservoirs there is a recent history of transfers of rainbow trout, and in the second group of four there have been no transfers over the last decade. There was no difference in mean similarity, using Jaccard's Coefficient and a Percentage Similarity Index, between the helminth faunas of trout in the reservoirs linked by transfers and those not so linked, and the distribution of several individual species of helminths was not consistent with their having been disseminated in the course of fish stockings. The hypothesis is thus rejected and it is concluded that anthropochore transfers of trout between reservoirs have been of little or no significance in the dispersal of parasites throughout the reservoirs or in the transfer of helminths from one reservoir to another. The reasons for this unexpected conclusion are discussed in the light of indications that factors unrelated to fish transfers were important determinants of helminth community composition in individual reservoirs.

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