Parasite communities and diet of Coris batuensis (Pisces: Labridae) from Lizard Island, Great Barrier Reef

Muñoz G.; Cribb T.H.

Keywords: community, australia, abundance, richness, ocean, pacific, diet, prey, selection, sea, mass, gastropoda, crustacea, island, species, composition, interaction, amphipoda, nematoda, mollusca, body, squamata, bivalvia, copepoda, barrier, pisces, lizard, queensland, cestoda, teleost, coral, reef, australasia, anthozoa, endoparasite, tetraphyllidea, host-parasite, perciform, Great, Labridae, Coris, batuensis

Abstract

Parasite infracommunities of the wrasse Coris batuensis (Bleeker, 1857) were analysed, and the relationship between endoparasites, diet, and host body weight inferred. Thirty-two fish were collected from Lizard Island, Australia. Percentage frequency of occurrence of prey categories in the gut was determined and abundance, prevalence and species richness of parasites were calculated. Fish mainly ate snails, bivalves and crustaceans and this did not vary with body weight. Thirty-one fish were parasitised with at least one of 21 taxa of parasites (4 ectoparasite and 17 endoparasite species), with an average of 4 species and 47 individuals per host. Tetraphyllidean cestode larvae were the most common and abundant group. Parasite life cycles are not known in detail, but small crustaceans, such as copepods and amphipods, are likely to be intermediate hosts for the cestodes, nematodes and digeneans found in C. batuensis. Molluscs, although frequent in the diet, may not be transmitting any parasite species. Numbers of prey and parasite species richness were not correlated. Composition, abundance and species richness of the parasite fauna were similar in hosts with different body weight, corresponding with C. batuensis having a similar diet throughout life. © Queensland Museum.

Más información

Título según SCOPUS: Parasite communities and diet of Coris batuensis (Pisces: Labridae) from Lizard Island, Great Barrier Reef
Título de la Revista: Memoirs of the Queensland Museum
Volumen: 52
Número: 1
Editorial: Queensland Museum
Fecha de publicación: 2009
Página de inicio: 191
Página final: 198
Idioma: eng
URL: http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-33845796235&partnerID=q2rCbXpz
Notas: SCOPUS