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Specificity and specialization of congeneric monogeneans parasitizing cyprinid fish.
Evolution. 2006 May; 60(5):1023-37.E

Abstract

Patterns and likely processes connected with evolution of host specificity in congeneric monogeneans parasitizing fish species of the Cyprinidae were investigated. A total of 51 Dactylogyrus species was included. We investigated (1) the link between host specificity and parasite phylogeny; (2) the morphometric correlates of host specificity, parasite body size, and variables of attachment organs important for host specificity; (3) the evolution of morphological adaptation, that is, attachment organ; (4) the determinants of host specificity following the hypothesis of specialization on more predictable resources considering maximal body size, maximal longevity, and abundance as measures of host predictability; and (5) the potential link between host specificity and parasite diversification. Host specificity, expressed as an index of host specificity including phylogenetic and taxonomic relatedness of hosts, was partially associated with parasite phylogeny, but no significant contribution of host phylogeny was found. The mapping of host specificity into the phylogenetic tree suggests that being specialist is not a derived condition for Dactylogyrus species. The different morphometric traits of the attachment apparatus seem to be selected in connection with specialization of specialist parasites and other traits favored as adaptations in generalist parasites. Parasites widespread on several host species reach higher abundance within hosts, which supports the hypothesis of ecological specialization. When separating specialists and generalists, we confirmed the hypothesis of specialization on a predictable resource; that is, specialists with larger anchors tend to live on fish species with larger body size and greater longevity, which could be also interpreted as a mechanism for optimizing morphological adaptation. We demonstrated that ecology of host species could also be recognized as an important determinant of host specificity. The mapping of morphological characters of the attachment organ onto the parasite phylogenetic tree reveals that morphological evolution of the attachment organ is connected with host specificity in the context of fish relatedness, especially at the level of host subfamilies. Finally, we did not find that host specificity leads to parasite diversification in congeneric monogeneans.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Institute of Botany and Zoology, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University, Kotlárská 2, 61137 Brno, Czech Republic. simkova@sci.muni.czNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

16817542

Citation

Simková, Andrea, et al. "Specificity and Specialization of Congeneric Monogeneans Parasitizing Cyprinid Fish." Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution, vol. 60, no. 5, 2006, pp. 1023-37.
Simková A, Verneau O, Gelnar M, et al. Specificity and specialization of congeneric monogeneans parasitizing cyprinid fish. Evolution. 2006;60(5):1023-37.
Simková, A., Verneau, O., Gelnar, M., & Morand, S. (2006). Specificity and specialization of congeneric monogeneans parasitizing cyprinid fish. Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution, 60(5), 1023-37.
Simková A, et al. Specificity and Specialization of Congeneric Monogeneans Parasitizing Cyprinid Fish. Evolution. 2006;60(5):1023-37. PubMed PMID: 16817542.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Specificity and specialization of congeneric monogeneans parasitizing cyprinid fish. AU - Simková,Andrea, AU - Verneau,Olivier, AU - Gelnar,Milan, AU - Morand,Serge, PY - 2006/7/5/pubmed PY - 2006/8/15/medline PY - 2006/7/5/entrez SP - 1023 EP - 37 JF - Evolution; international journal of organic evolution JO - Evolution VL - 60 IS - 5 N2 - Patterns and likely processes connected with evolution of host specificity in congeneric monogeneans parasitizing fish species of the Cyprinidae were investigated. A total of 51 Dactylogyrus species was included. We investigated (1) the link between host specificity and parasite phylogeny; (2) the morphometric correlates of host specificity, parasite body size, and variables of attachment organs important for host specificity; (3) the evolution of morphological adaptation, that is, attachment organ; (4) the determinants of host specificity following the hypothesis of specialization on more predictable resources considering maximal body size, maximal longevity, and abundance as measures of host predictability; and (5) the potential link between host specificity and parasite diversification. Host specificity, expressed as an index of host specificity including phylogenetic and taxonomic relatedness of hosts, was partially associated with parasite phylogeny, but no significant contribution of host phylogeny was found. The mapping of host specificity into the phylogenetic tree suggests that being specialist is not a derived condition for Dactylogyrus species. The different morphometric traits of the attachment apparatus seem to be selected in connection with specialization of specialist parasites and other traits favored as adaptations in generalist parasites. Parasites widespread on several host species reach higher abundance within hosts, which supports the hypothesis of ecological specialization. When separating specialists and generalists, we confirmed the hypothesis of specialization on a predictable resource; that is, specialists with larger anchors tend to live on fish species with larger body size and greater longevity, which could be also interpreted as a mechanism for optimizing morphological adaptation. We demonstrated that ecology of host species could also be recognized as an important determinant of host specificity. The mapping of morphological characters of the attachment organ onto the parasite phylogenetic tree reveals that morphological evolution of the attachment organ is connected with host specificity in the context of fish relatedness, especially at the level of host subfamilies. Finally, we did not find that host specificity leads to parasite diversification in congeneric monogeneans. SN - 0014-3820 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/16817542/Specificity_and_specialization_of_congeneric_monogeneans_parasitizing_cyprinid_fish_ L2 - https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/resolve/openurl?genre=article&sid=nlm:pubmed&issn=0014-3820&date=2006&volume=60&issue=5&spage=1023 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -