The parasite Perkinsus olseni (Perkinsea, Alveolata), the etiological agent of Perkinsosis, infects a wide range of bivalves and gastropods, including clams, particularly in Europe. This parasite coexists in sympatry with another Perkinsus species, P. chesapeaki, which, as opposed to P.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDetection approaches based on environmental DNA (eDNA) are widely used for free-living species but remain underutilized for parasite species. This study applies eDNA detection methods to elucidate the life cycle of the trematode , which infects the socioeconomically and ecologically important edible cockle () as its second intermediate host along the northeastern Atlantic coast, including Arcachon Bay, France. The first intermediate and definitive hosts remained unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Parasitol Parasites Wildl
December 2024
Identifying marine trematode parasites in host tissue can be complicated when there is limited morphological differentiation between species infecting the same host species. This poses a challenge for regular surveys of the parasite communities in species of socio-economic and ecological importance. Our study focused on identifying digenean trematode species infecting the marine bivalve across Europe by comparing morphological and molecular species identification methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInfection by parasites with complex life cycles such as trematodes depends on many environmental factors which may result in a time-lag between host biomass fluctuations and parasite density in hosts. A cockle (marine bivalve, second intermediate host) population and its associated parasite community were monitored over 15 years. A time-shift correlation analysis suggests that trematode abundance in cockles responds to cockle biomass after a long delay (8 year time-lag).
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