Abstract

Incidence, intensity and frequency distributions of infections in perch, Perca fluviatilis, with the eyeflukes Tylodelphys clavata and Diplostomum gasterostei were studied in a lake at monthly intervals over a period of two years. T. clavata had appeared in the lake immediately prior to the study, and its levels of infection continued to rise throughout the period of investigation whereas those of D. gasterostei remained relatively steady. The main period of infection of fish by both species of parasites was late summer, but a second and minor infection took place in spring. In the first year after its introduction T. clavata exhibited a seasonal cycle in incidence and intensity of infection and disappeared from fish in summer, but in the second year this cycle was masked by increased variation in development times and lack of synchrony throughout the parasite population. It is concluded that T. clavata has a life span of one year or less and that the parasites die within the fish, mainly in summer. D. gasterostei in contrast has a life span of at least one year, and disappearance of the parasite from the population is probably due to death of some heavily infected fish, although it was not possible to determine if this was due directly to the presence of the parasite.

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