The European eel may tolerate multiple infections at a low biological cost

Most animals are concurrently infected with multiple parasites, and interactions among them may influence both disease dynamics and host fitness. However, the sublethal costs of parasite infections are difficult to measure and the effects of concomitant infections with multiple parasite species on individual physiology and fitness are poorly described for wild hosts. To understand the costs of co-infection, we investigated the relationships among 189 European eel (Anguilla anguilla) from Mar Menor, parasites (richness and intensity) and eel's health status' (fluctuant asymmetry, splenic somatic index and the scaled mass index) by partial least squares regression. We found a positive relationship with 44% of the health status variance explained by parasites. Contracaecum sp. (Nematoda: Anisakidae) was the strongest predictor variable (44.72%) followed by Bucephalus anguillae (Platyhelminthes: Bucephalidae), (29.26%), considered the two most relevant parasites in the analysis. Subsequently, 15.67 and 12.01% of the response variables block were explained by parasite richness and Deropristis inflata (Platyhelminthes: Deropristiidae), respectively. Thus, the presence of multiple parasitic exposures with little effect on condition, strongly suggests that eels from Mar Menor tolerate multiparasitism.

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Mayo-Hernandez E. Serrano E. Penalver J. Garcia-Ayala A. Ruiz De Ybanez R. y Munoz P. The European eel may tolerate multiple infections at a low biological cost. Cambridge University, 2015. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0031182015000098

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Recuperado: 18 Jan 2025 15:02:23

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Tipo de recurso Artículo
Fecha de creación 05-11-2024
Fecha de última modificación 18-01-2025
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Identificador de los metadatos e11f85ca-c083-53d9-959b-6dc50fa2e83e
Idioma de los metadatos Español
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Categoría del conjunto de alto valor (HVD) Observación de la Tierra y medio ambiente
Categoría temática ISO 19115
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Nombre del autor Mayo-Hernandez, E., Serrano, E., Penalver, J., Garcia-Ayala, A., Ruiz De Ybanez, R. y Munoz, P.
Nombre del editor Cambridge University
Identificador alternativo DOI: 10.1017/S0031182015000098
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Email del autor elviramayohdz@gmail.com
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