Parasite communities in four study lakes in 1986 reflected the influences of eutrophication, pollution, and habitat fragmentation. Discriminant analyses of communities at the individual host level revealed two major axes. One contrasted communities in a lake affected by chemical pollution from a pulp mill with those from two eutrophic, less polluted lakes. Changes in the density of intermediate hosts, direct effects on ectoparasites, and impaired immune systems were regarded as important mechanisms. The second contrasted communities in an oligotrophic, unpolluted lake with those from the two eutrophic lakes and was more complex, reflecting habitat fragmentation (the absence of glochidia and some digeneans) and pollution or eutrophication, probably mediated by the same mechanisms as above. Changes in some index parasites in Lake Vatia monitored in 1994, following 8 years of reduced pollutant loading, supported our conclusion that parasite faunas in Lake Vatia in 1986 involved the effects of pollution.
S U M M A R YThe Dactylogyrus fauna was studied from the gills of 293 roach between February 1988 and April 1989. Roach were caught from three interconnected lakes in Central Finland. Nine Dactylogyrus species were found. Of these the seven most abundant were used for studying the abundance of species on different gill-arches, niche breadth and niche overlap between the species. It was found that all species had a species-specific preference for certain gill-arches. The total abundances of all the species went through distinct seasonal changes, peaking during the spring and early summer. Some seasonal variation was also exhibited in gill-arch preferences. Niche breadth and species overlap were mostly higher during the period of peak occurrence of the various species, but in the case of some species they appeared to be unrelated to abundance, indicating possible niche restriction by other species. Most significant was the restriction of D. micracanthus to the fourth gill-arch during the period of peak occurrence of D. similis. Experimental work is needed to verify the reasons for variations in the microhabitat distribution of certain Dactylogyrus species.
SUMMARYDactylogyrus (Monogenea) species were studied on the gills of roach (Rutilus rutilus) from a total of 293 fish in 3 interconnected lakes in Central Finland. One of the lakes is eutrophic and polluted by a paper and pulp mill, one is eutrophic and one is oligotrophic. Nine Dactylogyrus species were found. The structure of the monogenean communities was analysed at the component and infracommunity level and the Dactylogyrus fauna of the lakes was compared. Although it was found that the component communities tended to be very similar there were also differences. The abundance and diversity were highest in the polluted lake; the infracommunities of this lake were considerably more often dominated by Dactylogyrus micracanthus and the similarities between the infracommunities were higher within the lakes than between the lakes. It is suggested that these differences are due to the differing water quality of the lakes. The nature of the monogenean community, its possible interactivity, is also discussed.
Salmonid fish at fish farms in northern and central Finland and perch, Perca fluviatitis L., roach. Rutilus rutilus (L.), and whitefish, Coregonus sp., from four lakes in central Finland were studied between 1985 and 1990 for the occurrence of Yersinia ruckeri. The bacteria were found in fish from both areas, but in most cases, only single diseased salmon, Salmo salar L., brown trout, S. trutta L., rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss (Walbaum), whitefish and pereh were encountered and were always connected with stress conditions. One chnical outbreak occured in salmon fingerlings in northern Finland, and the fish were successfully treated with trimethoprim-sulpha. Monthly monitoring of lake fish revealed two symptomless carrier perch in two lakes. Outwith the main study a moribund perch with yersiniosis was found in a polluted lake, and for the first time in Finland, a rainbow trout was also found to have contracted yersiniosis in a small private pond. Sorbitol-positive and negative isolates have been found to occur in both moribund and carrier farmed fish, indicating that the sorbitol test is not essential when evaluating the pathogenicity of Y. ruckeri.
Experimental exposure to bleached kraft pulp and paper mill effluent
(BKME) at a concentration of 10% significantly
reduced the abundance and mean number of species of Dactylogyrus
on
the gills of naturally infected roach, Rutilus rutilus,
over a 3 week period. Seven Dactylogyrus species were recorded
which
differed widely in their susceptibility to the effluent.
The experiment coincided with a natural spring peak in dactylogyrid infections
on roach. BMKE exposure did not prevent
parasite reproduction but post-larval abundance was significantly higher
on
control than effluent-exposed hosts. There
was no evidence of a BKME-induced shift in microhabitat distribution of
dactylogyrids. Elevated levels of infection with
Dactylogyrus spp. have been recorded on roach from a Finnish lake
containing relatively low concentrations of BMKE.
The high exposure concentration in this experiment produced a similar reduction
in dactylogyrid infections to that
reported in separate studies in close proximity to Swedish pulp and paper
mills. The discrepancy between the results of
the Finnish and Swedish field investigations is therefore considered to
be
due to differences in BKME concentration between the study areas.
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