Fish monogeneans are lethal parasites in aquaculture. We provide the first experimental evidence that a notorious fish monogenean, Neobenedenia sp., can produce viable eggs in isolation for three consecutive generations. We infected individual, isolated, farmed barramundi, Lates calcarifer (Bloch) with a single oncomiracidium (larva) of the hermaphroditic monogenean Neobenedenia sp. Isolated parasites reached sexual maturity at day 10 post-hatch (24°C, 35‰) and laid ∼3,300 embryonated eggs over 17 days. Egg production rapidly increased following sexually maturity on day 10 (58±15 eggs) and peaked on day 15 (496±68 eggs) before gradually decreasing. Neobenedenia sp. exhibited egg laying and egg hatching rhythms. Parasites laid eggs continuously, but egg production increased in periods of darkness (64.3%), while the majority of oncomiracidia (81%) emerged from eggs in the first three hours of light. Eggs laid by isolated ‘parent’ parasites hatched and individual emerging oncomiracidia were used to infect more individual, isolated fish, with three consecutive, isolated, parasite generations (F1, F2 and F3) raised in the laboratory. Infection success and egg hatching success did not differ between generations. Our data show that one parasite, in the absence of a mate, presents a severe threat to captive fish populations.
Marine Parasitology Laboratory, Centre for Sustainable Tropical Fisheries and Aquaculture and the School of Marine and Tropical Biology, James Cook University, Queensland, Australia;Aquatic Environment and Fish Pathology Department, Faculty of Animal Science and Aquaculture, Vietnam National University of Agriculture, Hanoi, Vietnam;Marine Parasitology Laboratory, Centre for Sustainable Tropical Fisheries and Aquaculture and the School of Marine and Tropical Biology, James Cook University, Queensland, Australia
Recommended Citation:
Truong Dinh Hoai,Kate S. Hutson. Reproductive Strategies of the Insidious Fish Ectoparasite, Neobenedenia sp. (Capsalidae: Monogenea)[J]. PLOS ONE,2014-01-01,9(9)