Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-hc48f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T02:16:40.740Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Seasonal occurrence and maturation of Triaenophorus nodulosus (Pallas, 1781) (Cestoda: Pseudophyllidea) in the Pike Esox lucius L. of Llyn Tegid

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

James C. Chubb
Affiliation:
Department of Zoology, The University of Liverpool

Extract

1. An account is given of the seasonal occurrence and maturation of Triaenophorus nodulosus, based on the examination of the worms from 104 pike taken in Llyn Tegid from December 1957 to October 1959.

2. The plerocercoids of T. nodulosus were found in the livers of the perch of Llyn Tegid. Infective plerocercoids were found throughout the year, and it is considered that invasion of the pike, also, occurred throughout the year.

3. The annual cycle of maturation of T. nodulosus described by other workers is confirmed. Currently, five arbitrary stages of maturity were recognized, and the incidence of each of these stages during each month of the investigation is given. During June to September the worms were of plerocercoid-form, from October to December genital development occurred and the first eggs were observed in the uteri in December. Egg liberation was at a peak from April to May, and by June the population of matured worms was lost.

4. A non-linear relationship was found between the length of the pike and the numbers of worms occurring in the intestines of these fish. This phenomenon was related to the feeding habits of the pike; the medium-sized most heavily infected pike were eating the largest number of the perch containing the plerocercoids.

5. It was found that although invasion of the pike by plerocercoids of T. nodulosus occurred throughout the year, there was no increase in the numbers of worms in the pike intestines, to a maximum, at any time of the year, rather there was a more or less constant number of worms in pike of given length at all times of the year. It is suggested, therefore, that a dynamic equilibrium exists between gain of plerocercoids and loss of worms from the pike intestines at all times.

6. Factors affecting the change from plerocercoid to a mature worm are discussed. It is suggested that an experimental approach is needed.

I am grateful to the Welsh Land and Agricultural Sub-Commission for permission to net Llyn Tegid, and to Captain G. H. A. Boyle of the Sub-Commission for his help in the capture of the pike. I also wish to thank Professor R. J. Pumphrey in whose Department this work was carried out, Dr P. M. Sheppard for statistical analyses, Dr J. W. Jones and Mr S. Prudhoe (British Museum, Natural History) for discussion of the manuscript. The work was carried out during the tenure of a Department of Scientific and Industrial Research studentship.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1963

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Baylis, H. A. (1928). Records of some parasitic worms from British vertebrates. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (10), 1, 329–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baylis, H. A. (1939). Further records of parasitic worms from British vertebrates. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (11), 4, 473–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Choquette, L. P. E. (1951). Parasites of freshwater fish. V. Parasitic helminths of the muskallunge, Esox m. masquinongy Mitchill, in the St Lawrence watershed. Canad. J. Zool. 29, 290–5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Copland, W. O. (1956). Notes on the food and parasites of pike (Esox lucius) in Loch Lomond. Glasg. Nat. 17, 230–5.Google Scholar
Copland, W. O. (1957). The parasites of Loch Lomond fishes. In Studies on Loch Lomond, 1, 128–33, Glasgow: Blackie and Son Ltd.Google Scholar
Ekbaum, E. (1937). On the maturation and hatching of the eggs of the cestode, Triaenophorus crassus Forel, from Canadian fish. J. Parasit. 23, 293–5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hopkins, C. A. (1959). Seasonal variations in the incidence and development of the cestode Proteocephalus filicollis (Rud. 1810) in Gasterosteus aculeatus (L. 1766). Parasitology, 49, 529–42.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Miller, R. B. (1943 a). Studies on cestodes of the genus Triaenophorus from fish of Lesser Slave Lake, Alberta. I. Introduction and life of Triaenophorus crassus Forel and T. nodulosus (Pallas) in the definitive host, Esox lucius. Canad. J. Res. D, 21, 160–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, R. B. (1943 b). Studies on cestodes of the genus Triaenophorus from fish of Lesser Slave Lake, Alberta. II. The eggs, coracidia and life in the first intermediate host of Triaenophorus crassus Forel and T. nodulosus (Pallas). Canad. J. Res. D, 21, 284–91.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, R. B. (1945 a). Studies on cestodes of the genus Triaenophorus of fish of Lesser Slave Lake, Alberta. III. Notes on Triaenophorus nodulosus (Pallas) in the second intermediate host. Canad. J. Res. D, 23, 15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, R. B. (1945 b). Studies on cestodes of the genus Triaenophorus from fish of Lesser Slave Lake, Alberta. IV. The life of Triaenophorus crassus Forel in the second intermediate host. Canad. J. Res. D, 23, 105–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, R. B. (1945 c). Studies on cestodes of the genus Triaenophorus from fish of Lesser Slave Lake, Alberta. V. Description and life history of Triaenophorus stizostedionis n.sp. Canad. J. Res. D, 23, 117–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, R. B. (1952). A review of the Triaenophorus problem in Canadian Lakes. Bull. Fish. Res. Bd. Canad. 95, 42P.Google Scholar
Newton, M. V. B. (1932). The biology of Triaenophorus tricuspidatus (Bloch 1779), in Western Canada. Contr. Canad. biol. fish. (N.S.), 7, 341–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rawson, D. (1952). The occurrence of parasitic worms in British freshwater fishes. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (12), 5, 877–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scheuring, L. (1929). Beobachtungen zur Biologie des Genus Triaenophorus und Betrachtungen über das jahreszeitliche Auftreten von Bandwurmen. Z. Parasitenk. 2, 157–77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smyth, J. D. (1952). Studies on tapeworm physiology. VI. Effect of temperature on the maturation in vitro of Schistocephalus solidus. J. exp. Biol. 29, 304–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar