Abstract

Parasite communities of fishes are known to respond directly to the abiotic environment of the host, for example, to water quality and water temperature. Biotic factors are also important as they affect the exposure profile through heterogeneities in parasite distribution in the environment. Parasites in a particular environment may pose a strong selection on fish. For example, ecological differences in selection by parasites have been hypothesized to facilitate evolutionary differentiation of freshwater fish morphs specializing on different food types. However, as parasites may also respond directly to abiotic environment the parasite risk does not depend only on biotic features of the host environment. It is possible that different morphs experience specific selection gradients by parasites but it is not clear how consistent the selection is when abiotic factors change. We examined parasite pressure in sympatric morphs of threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) across a temperature gradient in two large Icelandic lakes, Myvatn and Thingvallavatn. Habitat-specific temperature gradients in these lakes are opposite. Myvatn lava rock morph lives in a warm environment, while the mud morph lives in the cold. In Thingvallavatn, the lava rock morph lives in a cold environment and the mud morph in a warm habitat. We found more parasites in fish living in higher temperature in both lakes, independent of the fish morph, and this pattern was similar for the two dominating parasite taxa, trematodes and cestodes. However, at the same time, we also found higher parasite abundance in a third morph living in deep cold–water habitat in Thingvallavatn compared to the cold-water lava morph, indicating strong effect of habitat-specific biotic factors. Our results suggest complex interactions between water temperature and biotic factors in determining the parasite community structure, a pattern that may have implications for differentiation of stickleback morphs.

Highlights

  • Parasite community structure of fishes typically strongly depends on both abiotic and biotic factors

  • We studied parasitism in stickleback morphs in Thingvallavatn and Myvatn where opposing morph-temperature patterns allowed comparison between the effects of biotic and abiotic environmental factors

  • We found that the abundance of parasites was strongly associated with water temperature in both lakes irrespective of the host morph, resulting in opposite patterns of parasitism in the morphs

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Parasite community structure of fishes typically strongly depends on both abiotic and biotic factors. Water quality can be an important determinant of parasite species diversity and infection intensity (Marcogliese and Cone 1996; Carney and Dick 2000; Halmetoja et al 2000; Goater et al 2005). Human-induced changes, such as eutrophication and pollution, are strongly reflected in parasite community structure (Khan and Thulin 1991; Koskivaara et al 1991; Lafferty 1997; Valtonen et al 1997, 2003; Karvonen et al 2013). One of the key abiotic environmental factors controlling parasite dynamics in aquatic systems is water temperature. Changes in water temperature a 2013 The Authors.

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call