Abstract

BackgroundBecause agriculture and offshore oil extraction are significant economic activities in the southern Gulf of Mexico, high concentrations of nutrients and hydrocarbons are expected. As parasite communities are sensitive to environmental impacts, these contaminants should have an effect on metrics such as species richness, relative abundance and similarity. Consequently, these community metrics can be used as indicators of aquatic environmental health. Our objectives were to describe the parasite communities of the shoal flounder Syacium gunteri and to determine potential thresholds above which environmental contaminants become major controlling factors of parasite community metrics.MethodsThe study area included 33 sampling sites in the southern Gulf of Mexico, where benthic sediments, water and shoal flounder individuals were collected. Data on ecto- and endo-parasites from flounder and nutrients, contaminants and physicochemical variables from the water and sediments were obtained. The statistical associations of the parasite community metrics at the component and infracommunity levels and the environmental data were analysed using redundancy analysis (RDA).ResultsOverall, 203 shoal flounder were examined for parasites, recovering 13 metazoan parasite species, and 48 physicochemical (e.g. temperature, nutrients) and contaminant (e.g. hydrocarbons, heavy metals) variables were obtained. The larval stages of the cestode Oncomegas wageneri and the nematodes Pseudoterranova decipiens and Hysterothylacium sp. were numerically dominant at the component and infracommunity levels. The parasite community metrics had significant negative statistical associations with both nitrate and total PAHs. With the exception of these two chemicals, which exceeded the threshold effect levels (TELs), no other environmental variable exceeded the range considered safe for marine organisms.ConclusionsThe community metrics chosen generally had robust statistically significant associations with both physicochemical and contaminant variables, which supports the ecological relevance of these parameters as indicators of aquatic environmental health. Within the study area, the shoal flounder and their parasites live in a polluted environment with relatively high levels of hydrocarbons and nitrate. Regarding nitrate, we emphasise that if uncontrolled sewage discharge continues in the southern Gulf of Mexico, hypoxic conditions similar to those caused by the Mississippi river can be expected in the near future.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13071-014-0541-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Because agriculture and offshore oil extraction are significant economic activities in the southern Gulf of Mexico, high concentrations of nutrients and hydrocarbons are expected

  • Marine biologists currently recognise that both marine free-living benthic organisms and their parasites are useful as bioindicators of aquatic environmental health, i.e., as species or communities used to assess the quality of the environment and how it changes over time [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • The environmental impacts primarily produced by river run-off and polyaromatic hydrocarbons in the study area apparently have a direct effect on the parasite community metrics of S. gunteri

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Summary

Introduction

Because agriculture and offshore oil extraction are significant economic activities in the southern Gulf of Mexico, high concentrations of nutrients and hydrocarbons are expected. As parasite communities are sensitive to environmental impacts, these contaminants should have an effect on metrics such as species richness, relative abundance and similarity. These community metrics can be used as indicators of aquatic environmental health. Parasites of aquatic organisms are good bioindicators of environmental impact because their populations and communities are sensitive to environmental insults [5,7,8,9]. Vidal-Martínez [5] showed that parasite communities have a positive interaction term with eutrophication, meaning that this environmental impact increases several community metrics such as species richness or relative abundance

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