A total of 2494 Menidia beryllilla and 717 M. peninsulae (Atherinidae) were examined from the Pensacola Bay area for parasitic copepods. M. peninsulae was infested with Bomolochus concinnus (Bomolochidae) and Ergasilus manicatus (Ergasilidae) and had incidences (and intensities) of 12.3% (1.6) and 4 2 % (1.3), respectively. Only seven M. peninsulae were infested with both species of parasites. M. beryllina was infested only with E. manicatus and showed different incidences (and intensities) in two areas: Mulatto Bayou, 13.2% (1.9); Catfish Basin, 53.0% (2.3). Fishes with parasites were significantly longer than fishes without parasites and the case of increasing number of parasites with increasing fish length was reinforced. B. concinnus is a warm water parasite on M. peninsulae while E. manicatus acts as a cold water parasite on M. peninsulae and a warm water parasite on M.beryllina. The parasites tended to be overdispersed on their hosts but at the same time showed evidence of negative intraspecific associations within a host. These data suggest intraspecific avoidance by the parasite but active acquisition by the host.
The composition of animal communities developing from planktonic larvae in aquariums. A marked increase in the abundance of the annelid Polydora ligni in aquariums containing sand and flowing estuarine water was altered in the presence of the carbamate insecticide Sevin (carbaryl). Treatments were control and concentrations of Sevin that averaged 1.1, 11.1, and 103 micrograms/l; each treatment was replicated 8 times. Animals that colonized aquarium sand were collected in a 1-mm mesh sieve after 10 wk of exposure. Mollusks' arthropods, annelids, and nemerteans were the numerically dominant phyla. The average number of species per aquarium was significantly less (alpha = 0.05) in aquariums containing 11.1 or 103 micrograms/l than in those containing 1.1 micrograms/l or in control aquariums. The abundant clam Ensis minor grew significantly less in length at the higher concentrations of Sevin. The amphipod Corophium acherusicum was particularly affected; significantly fewer were found at all concentrations than in the control aquariums containing 103 micrograms/l corresponded to a marked decrease in the number of other annelids and to a significant absence of nemerteans.
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