Parasites often use external cues to identify and move toward environments where they are likely to encounter suitable hosts. The trematode parasite Euhaplorchis californiensis produces cercariae that emerge from California horn snails ( Cerithideopsis californica [= Cerithidea californica]) to infect California killifish ( Fundulus parvipinnis) as second intermediate hosts. Based upon work on a congeneric Euhaplorchis species from Florida, and based on the ecology of its killifish host, we hypothesized that E. californiensis cercariae in southern California estuaries are positively phototactic and negatively geotactic, using both sunlight and gravity to guide their movement to the upper water column. To distinguish positive phototaxis from negative geotaxis, we first quantified E. californiensis movement in response to light along a horizontal plane and determined they were positively phototactic. In a second experiment, we quantified E. californiensis movement along a vertical plane in response to an overhead light, a light from below, or no light. We found that E. californiensis exhibit negative geotaxis in the absence of light, but will swim in the direction of gravity to move toward a light source from below. Thus, E. californiensis are both positively phototactic and negatively geotactic, but cercariae prioritize phototactic cues. These results suggest that E. californiensis cercariae aggregate in the open water, indicating that the pelagic zone represents an area of high infection risk for California killifish hosts.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1645/17-80 | DOI Listing |
J Parasitol
June 2018
2 Scripps Institution of Oceanography-Marine Biology Research Division, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093.
Parasites often use external cues to identify and move toward environments where they are likely to encounter suitable hosts. The trematode parasite Euhaplorchis californiensis produces cercariae that emerge from California horn snails ( Cerithideopsis californica [= Cerithidea californica]) to infect California killifish ( Fundulus parvipinnis) as second intermediate hosts. Based upon work on a congeneric Euhaplorchis species from Florida, and based on the ecology of its killifish host, we hypothesized that E.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Parasitol
October 2012
Department of Biology & Center for Subtropical Studies, University of Texas-Pan American, Edinburg, Texas 78539, USA.
Some parasites modify the behavior of intermediate hosts to increase the probability of transmission to the next host in their life cycle. In habitats where this is common, parasites play an important role in predator-prey links and food web dynamics. In this study we used laboratory observations to investigate the behavior of longnose killifish, Fundulus similis, that were naturally infected with metacercariae of the trematode, Euhaplorchis sp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParasitol Res
April 2010
Department of Biology, Brandon University, John R. Brodie Science Building, 270-18th Street, Brandon, MB, R7A 6A9, Canada.
Alterations of abiotic factors due to global climate change are predicted to impact disease dynamics, particularly for pathogens with complex life cycles involving free-living infectious stages, such as the cercariae of trematode parasites. Previous investigations of cercarial output, longevity, and infectivity suggest an overall increase in trematode transmission in response to elevated temperature. However, while increased temperature will likely be accompanied by changes in salinity and pH in marine ecosystems, little is known regarding their influence on cercariae.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParasitol Res
December 2002
Department of Chemistry, Lafayette College, Easton, PA 18042, USA.
Graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry and ion chromatography were used to study the metallic ions in the digestive gland-gonad complex (DGG) of Cerithidea californica snails infected with the daughter rediae and cercariae of Euhaplorchis californiensis and in uninfected DGGs. Seven metals (calcium, copper, iron, magnesium, potassium, sodium, zinc) were found to be present in infected and uninfected DGGs at concentrations above the minimum levels required for detection. Of these, calcium was present in significantly higher amounts (Student's t-test, confidence level of 95%) in the infected versus uninfected DGGs; magnesium occurred in significantly lower amounts in the infected DGGs.
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