Journal of Marine Science and Engineering (Nov 2022)
The Infection of Paracalanid Copepods by the Alveolate Parasite <i>Ellobiopsis chattoni</i> Caullery, 1910 in a Subtropical Coastal Area
Abstract
Paracalanid copepods, common in tropical zooplankton communities, are known hosts for a variety of parasites. Nevertheless, relatively little is known about the prevalence and consequences of parasitism in these copepods. In this study, we analyzed the relationship between two paracalanid copepods, Parvocalanus crassirostris and Paracalanus spp., with a common parasite, the alveolate protist Ellobiopsis chattoni, in a subtropical environment on the south-east Brazilian coast. We assessed the frequency and abundance of parasites in juveniles and adult male and female copepods. We observed that 22 out of 4014 Paracalanus spp. (0.55%) and 98 out of 3920 P. crassirostris were infected (2.5%). E. chattoni were rarely found in other taxa (about 0.05% for Oithona spp. and Acartia lilljeborgii). The parasites were most frequently attached to cephalosome appendages (73.6%), with up to four cells per copepod. The parasites were more prevalent in adults than juveniles, and adult females were more frequently infected than males. E. chattoni had a likely negative impact on copepod growth because the infected females were smaller than the non-infected females (p < 0.001). Females are usually bigger and live longer than males, which could account for their high frequency of infection.
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