Abstract

A main feature of the data here presented is the number of new records. For the sake of brevity these are tabulated below, under their respective headings.Another feature is the wide geographical distribution of a large percentage of the parasites herein recorded, particularly of such forms as Zoogonoides viviparus (Olsson), Derogenes varicus (Mueller) and Hemiurus communis Odhn. The former has been recorded for St Andrews, Millport, Aberdeen, Plymouth, Northumberland, Liverpool, Galway, and also for foreign seas. Derogenes varicus has been recorded for St Andrews, Millport, Plymouth, Aberdeen, Northumberland, Galway, and for foreign seas. Hemiurus communis has been recorded for St Andrews, Millport, Plymouth, Northumberland, Liverpool, Aberdeen, Galway, and for foreign seas.This suggests that the intermediate host of the larval stages of these parasites must be some common marine form, in all probability an invertebrate, which itself enjoys a very wide geographical distribution.A further feature is the tendency of certain parasites to infect a variety of fish, the more notorious being Derogenes varicus (Mueller) and Hemiurus communis Odhn. Of the twenty-six species of marine fishes examined at Galway, eleven (42 per cent.) were found to harbour Derogenes various. The infected fishes were the bib (G. luscus), cod (G. morrhua), pollack (G. pollachius), dab (Pleuronectes limanda), plaice (P. platessa), tub (Trigla hirundo), grey gurnard (T. gurnardus), brill (Rhombus laevis), hake (Merluccius vulgaris), common sole (Solea vulgaris), common sea bream (Sparus centrodontus).Hemiurus communis was found parasitising eight species of fish, i.e. 31 per cent, of the total number of species examined. The hosts affected were the bib (G. luscus), whiting (G. merlangus), cod (G. morrhua), pollack (G. pollachius), flounder (P. flesus), tub (T. hirundo), plaice (P. platessa), and the common sea bream (S. centrodontus).At the moment it is a little premature to prophesy to what extent the discovery of encysted specimens of Prosorhynchus crucibulum (Rud.) in the gill tissues of the cod (Gadus morrhua) will assist in elucidating the life-history of this parasite. Mature specimens of Prosorhynchus crucibulum have previously been recorded as occurring in the alimentary canal of the conger eel (Conger niger). The writer discovered partly digested specimens of small cod to form a considerable bulk of the stomach contents of the conger eel.

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