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Morphological plasticity and phylogeny in a monogenean parasite transferring between wild and reared fish populations (CROSBI ID 191564)

Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija

Mladineo, Ivona ; Šegvić-Bubić, Tanja ; Stanić, Rino ; Desdevises, Yves Morphological plasticity and phylogeny in a monogenean parasite transferring between wild and reared fish populations // PLoS One, 8 (2013), 4; e62011, 10. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0062011

Podaci o odgovornosti

Mladineo, Ivona ; Šegvić-Bubić, Tanja ; Stanić, Rino ; Desdevises, Yves

engleski

Morphological plasticity and phylogeny in a monogenean parasite transferring between wild and reared fish populations

It is widely accepted that disease interactions between cultured and wild fish occur repeatedly, although reported cases have mainly relied just on the observation of similar symptoms in affected populations. Whether there is an explicit pathogen transfer between fish stocks, or each develops its own pathogen population, has been insufficiently studied and rarely supported by molecular tools. In this study, we used population dynamics and genetic structure of the monogenean Furnestinia echeneis in reared and neighbouring wild sea bream to indicate pathogen transfer, characterized by the phenotypic plasticity of the parasite attachment apparatus and the lack of phylogenetic differentiation. The observed pattern of genetic variation inferred by nuclear DNA Internal Transcribed Spacer 1 (ITS1) and mtDNA cytochrome C oxidase 1 (COI), between parasite populations is most likely caused by a recent shared demographic history like a reduced species area in the last glacial period. In spite of such recent expansion that populations underwent, F. echeneis shows differentiation in haptor morphometry as an adaptive trait in closely related populations at the aquaculture site. This suggests that differentiation in morphology may occur relatively rapidly in this species and that adaptive forces, not the speciation process, drives this monogenean parasitation. On the other hand, the observed phylogenetic inertia suggests a low to moderate gene flow (based on FST) between parasites in cultured and wild fish, evidencing for the first time the transfer of pathogens at the aquaculture site inferred by a molecular tool.

monogenea ; Furnestinia echeneis ; sea bream ; phylogeny ; pathogen transfer

Rad je financiran sredstvima projekta Cogito.

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Podaci o izdanju

8 (4)

2013.

e62011

10

objavljeno

1932-6203

10.1371/journal.pone.0062011

Povezanost rada

Veterinarska medicina

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