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      The Diversity of Teleost Fish Trematodes in the Bay of Bizerte, Tunisia (Western Mediterranean)

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      1 , * , 1
      Helminthologia
      Sciendo
      Digenea, diversity, checklist, Bay of Bizerte, Mediterranean, Tunisia

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          Summary

          A total of 39 digeneans species allocated to 28 genera in 12 families were recovered from 534 fishes belonging to 14 species in three families (Carangidae, Mullidae and Sparidae) collected in the Bay of Bizerte off the coast of Tunisia. We provide a host-parasite list of records from this locality, including 63 host-parasite combinations. The Opecoelidae Ozaki, 1925 is the most diverse group with 12 species. The species richness of individual digenean genera in the Bay of Bizerte ranges from 1 – 6 species. The mean number of 2.58 species per host indicates a relatively high digenean diversity in the Bay of Bizerte, which is related to its geographical location, its connection with the neighbouring Bizerte Lagoon and the nature of the bottoms of the littoral marine areas off the northern Tunisian coasts. This diversity is significantly higher than that reported off the southern coast of Tunisia and distinctly lower than that observed for teleost hosts in the Scandola Nature Reserve off Corsica. Generally, the levels of infection in teleosts fishes from the Bay of Bizerte are lower than those from the other two localities.

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          The Use of Ecological Terms in Parasitology (Report of an Ad Hoc Committee of the American Society of Parasitologists)

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            Host diversity begets parasite diversity: bird final hosts and trematodes in snail intermediate hosts.

            An unappreciated facet of biodiversity is that rich communities and high abundance may foster parasitism. For parasites that sequentially use different host species throughout complex life cycles, parasite diversity and abundance in 'downstream' hosts should logically increase with the diversity and abundance of 'upstream' hosts (which carry the preceding stages of parasites). Surprisingly, this logical assumption has little empirical support, especially regarding metazoan parasites. Few studies have attempted direct tests of this idea and most have lacked the appropriate scale of investigation. In two different studies, we used time-lapse videography to quantify birds at fine spatial scales, and then related bird communities to larval trematode communities in snail populations sampled at the same small spatial scales. Species richness, species heterogeneity and abundance of final host birds were positively correlated with species richness, species heterogeneity and abundance of trematodes in host snails. Such community-level interactions have rarely been demonstrated and have implications for community theory, epidemiological theory and ecosystem management.
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              Food webs: a plea for parasites.

              Parasites have the capacity to regulate host populations and may be important determinants of community structure, yet they are usually neglected in studies of food webs. Parasites can provide much of the information on host biology, such as diet and migration, that is necessary to construct accurate webs. Because many parasites have complex life cycles that involve several different hosts, and often depend on trophic interactions for transmission, parasites provide complementary views of web structure and dynamics. Incorporation of parasites in food webs can substantially after baste web properties, Including connectance, chain length and proportions of top and basal species, and can allow the testing of specific hypotheses related to food-web dynamics.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Helminthologia
                Helminthologia
                helm
                helm
                Helminthologia
                Sciendo
                0440-6605
                1336-9083
                June 2018
                01 June 2018
                : 55
                : 2
                : 146-156
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Unité de Recherche: Bio-Ecologie Animale et Systématique Evolutive, Faculté des Sciences, Université Tunis El Manar , 2092 Tunis, Tunisie
                Author notes
                Article
                helm-2018-0004
                10.2478/helm-2018-0004
                6799550
                31662641
                e613cd20-b1a0-440a-be0d-53518e892cb5
                © 2018 R. Antar, L. Gargouri, published by Sciendo

                This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.

                History
                : 05 December 2017
                : 16 January 2018
                Page count
                Pages: 11
                Categories
                Research Articles

                digenea,diversity,checklist,bay of bizerte,mediterranean,tunisia

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