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Supplementary material from "Hooked on fish blood: the reliance of a gill parasite on haematophagy"

Posted on 2024-10-21 - 13:19
Parasitism involves diverse evolutionary strategies, including adaptations for blood feeding, which provides essential nutrients for growth and reproduction. Sparicotyle chrysophrii (Polyopisthocotyla: Microcotylidae), an ectoparasitic flatworm, infects the gills of gilthead seabream (Sparus aurata), significantly affecting fish health, welfare and Mediterranean cage farm profitability. Despite its impact, limited information exists on its feeding behaviour. This study demonstrates the presence of blood and exogenous haem groups in S. chrysophrii and explores its digestive tract using light and electron microscopy, elucidating its internal morphology and spatial arrangement. Elemental analysis of the digestive haematin cells shows residual oxidised haem depots as haematin crystals. Additionally, we studied the impact of the blood feeding on the host by estimating the average volume of blood intake for an adult parasite (2.84 ± 2.12µL·24h-1), and we described the significant drop of the plasmatic free iron levels in infected hosts. Overall, we demonstrate the parasite’s reliance on its host blood, the parasite’s buccal and digestive morphological adaptations for blood feeding, and the provoked effect on the fish host health.

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Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences

AUTHORS (7)

  • Enrique Riera-Ferrer
    Itziar Estensoro
    Beatriz López-Gurillo
    Raquel Del Pozo
    Francisco Montero
    Ariadna Sitjà-Bobadilla
    Oswaldo Palenzuela
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