Early development and life cycle of Contracaecum multipapillatum s.l. from a brown pelican Pelecanus occidentalis in the Gulf of California, Mexico
Metadatos
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Valles Vega, Isabel; Molina Fernández, Dolores; Benítez Rodríguez, Rocío; Hernández Trujillo, Sergio; Adroher Auroux, Francisco JavierEditorial
Inter-Research Science Publisher
Materia
Contracaecum multipapillatum Nematoda Anisakidae Fish parasite Genetic identification Development Aquatic life cycle Mullet Brown pelican Gulf of California
Fecha
2017-08-09Referencia bibliográfica
Valles-Vega, I., Molina-Fernández, D., Benítez, R., Hernández-Trujillo, S., & Adroher, F. J. (2017). Early development and life cycle of Contracaecum multipapillatum s.l. from a brown pelican Pelecanus occidentalis in the Gulf of California, Mexico. Diseases of Aquatic Organisms, 125(3), 167–178. https://doi.org/10.3354/dao03147
Patrocinador
This work was funded by the Spanish grant CGL2013-47725-P from the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad and European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) and Mexican grant SIP20141443 from IPN.Resumen
The initial developmental stages of Contracaecum multipapillatum (von Drasche, 1882) Lucker, 1941 sensu lato were studied using eggs obtained from the uterus of female nematodes (genetically identified) found in a brown pelican Pelecanus occidentalis from Bahía de La Paz (Gulf of California, Mexico). Optical microscopy revealed a smooth or slightly rough surface to the eggs. Egg dimensions were approximately 53 x 43 μm, although when the larvae developed inside their size increased to 66 x 55 μm. Hatching and survival of the larvae was greater at 15 ºC than 24 ºC and increased salinity resulted in a slight increase in hatching but seemed to reduce survival at 24 ºC, but not at 15 ºC. The recently hatched larvae measured 261 x 16 μm within their sheath. When placed in culture medium the larvae grew within their sheath and a small percentage (~2%) exsheathed completely (314 x 19 μm). The larvae continued to grow and develop once they had exsheathed, attaining mean dimensions of 333 x 22 μm. Although they did not moult during culture, optical microscopy revealed a morphology typical of third-stage larvae. Finally, the genetic identity found between the larvae of the parasite from mullet and adult females from the brown pelican suggests a life cycle of C. multipapillatum in which the mullet are involved as intermediate/paratenic hosts and the brown pelicans as final hosts in the geographical area of Bahía de La Paz.