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Parasites either reduce or increase host vulnerability to fishing: a case study of a parasitic copepod and its salmonid host. | LitMetric

Parasites either reduce or increase host vulnerability to fishing: a case study of a parasitic copepod and its salmonid host.

Naturwissenschaften

Graduate School of Environmental Science, Hokkaido University, N10W5 Sapporo, Hokkaido, 060-0810, Japan.

Published: February 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Parasites can enhance a host's vulnerability to predators by altering their behavior, but they also influence how predators choose their prey based on the host's infection status.
  • When studying the copepod Salmincola cf. markewitschi, it was found that infected fish were less likely to be caught by anglers when their body condition was poor, possibly due to decreased feeding activity.
  • Conversely, when fish had a good body condition, those infected with parasites showed increased vulnerability to being caught, suggesting that the parasites' negative impacts were compensated by the host's health.
  • Additionally, online observations indicated a public aversion to consuming parasitized fish, which also led to decreased angler satisfaction, highlighting the broader implications of parasites on fishing practices and behaviors

Article Abstract

Parasites generally increase host vulnerability to predators via host manipulation for trophic transmission and reduction of host activities. Predators also select prey depending on the parasite infection status. Despite such parasites' roles in prey-predator interactions in wild animals, how parasites affect human hunting probability and resource consumption remains unknown. We examined the effects of the ectoparasitic copepod Salmincola cf. markewitschi on fish vulnerability to angling. We found that infected fish were less vulnerable compared with non-infected fish when the fish body condition was low, which was probably due to reduced foraging activity. On the contrary, infected fish were more vulnerable when the host body condition was high, probably due to the compensation of parasites' negative effects. A Twitter analysis also suggested that people avoided eating fish with parasites and that anglers' satisfaction decreased when captured fish were parasitized. Thus, we should consider how animal hunting is affected by parasites not only for catchability but also for avoiding parasite infection sources in many local regions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00114-023-01836-xDOI Listing

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