Artigo Produção Nacional Revisado por pares

Host population density as the major determinant of endoparasite species richness in floodplain fishes of the upper Paraná River, Brazil

2005; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 79; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1079/joh2004264

ISSN

1475-2697

Autores

Ricardo Massato Takemoto, Gilberto Cezar Pavanelli, M.A.P. Lizama, José L. Luque, Robert Poulin,

Tópico(s)

Genetic diversity and population structure

Resumo

Abstract A comparative analysis of parasite species richness was performed across 53 species of fish from the floodplain of the upper Paraná River, Brazil. Values of catch per unit effort, CPUE (number of individuals of a given fish species captured per 1000 m 2 of net during 24 h) were used as a rough measure of population density for each fish species in order to test its influence on endoparasite species richness. The effects of several other host traits (body size, social behaviour, reproductive behaviour, spawning type, trophic category, feeding habits, relative position in the food web, preference for certain habitats and whether the fish species are native or exotic) on metazoan endoparasite species richness were also evaluated. The CPUE was the sole significant predictor of parasite species richness, whether controlling for the confounding influences of host phylogeny and sampling effort or not. The results suggest that in the floodplain of the upper Paraná River (with homogeneous physical characteristics and occurrence of many flood pulses), population density of different host species might be the major determinant of their parasite species richness.

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