Artigo Revisado por pares

Helminth parasites of freshwater fishes of the Balsas River drainage basin of Southwestern Mexico

2001; Volume: 68; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

ISSN

1938-2952

Autores

Guillermo Salgado‐Maldonado, Guillermina Cabañas-Carranza, Juan Manuel Caspeta‐Mandujano, Eduardo Soto‐Galera, Elizabeth Mayen-Pena, David Brailovsky, Rafael Báez-Valé,

Tópico(s)

Fish Biology and Ecology Studies

Resumo

This study presents the results of the first survey of the helminth parasites in fishes in the Balsas River drainage, southwestern Mexico. A total of 25 species of helminth parasites in 13 freshwater fish species (n = 1,045) was collected between December 1995 and September 1998. The most prevalent and widespread helminth species was the Asian tapeworm Bothriocephalus acheilognathi. Two features characterize the helminth fauna of the Balsas River basin fishes: (1) a predominance of nematode and trematode species coupled with a scarcity of monogeneans and acanthocephalans; and (2) all helminths found had previously been reported from other regions of Mexico; therefore the composition of the helminth fauna of the fishes of the Balsas River drainage is not very distinct from that of fishes from other previously studied freshwater basins in Mexico.

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