2023
DOI: 10.1101/2023.11.27.568842
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Aggressive mimicry lure polymorphisms in the parasitic musselLampsilis fasciolamodel fish or leech host prey and differ in morphology and pigmentation, but not in display behavior

Trevor L. Hewitt,
Paul Johnson,
Michael Buntin
et al.

Abstract: Unionoid freshwater mussels (Bivalvia: Unionidae) are free-living apart from a brief, obligately parasitic, larval stage that infects fish hosts and gravid female mussels have evolved a spectrum of strategies to infect fish hosts with their larvae. In many North American species, this involves displaying a mantle lure: a pigmented fleshy extension that acts as an aggressive mimic of a host fish prey, thereby eliciting a feeding response that results in host infection. The mantle lure ofLampsilis fasciolais of … Show more

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“…We used a combination of field-collection, captive breeding, museum specimens, and ecological surveys to collect genetic, phenotypic, and population data on this species. This publication was first released as a preprint ( Hewitt et al, 2023 ; doi: ), however, the version presented here is the official peer-reviewed publication.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We used a combination of field-collection, captive breeding, museum specimens, and ecological surveys to collect genetic, phenotypic, and population data on this species. This publication was first released as a preprint ( Hewitt et al, 2023 ; doi: ), however, the version presented here is the official peer-reviewed publication.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%