Am. Gannicott et Rc. Tinsley, ENVIRONMENTAL-EFFECTS ON TRANSMISSION OF DISCOCOTYLE SAGITTATA (MONOGENEA) - EGG-PRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT, Parasitology, 117, 1998, pp. 499-504
Egg production by the freshwater gill monogenean Discocotyle sagittata
infecting rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) was monitored at 5, 13
and 18 degrees C; eggs were incubated at 6, 10, 13, 15, 16, 18, 22 and
26 degrees C and the hatching times determined. Mean per capita outpu
t at 13 degrees C ranged from 0.8 eggs/worm/day (e/w/d) to 18.3 e/w/d
for 25 hosts (burdens 1-17 warms/host). Average egg production rates f
or worms in single burdens varied from 3 e/d to 14.6 e/d at 13 degrees
C, mean 7.6 e/d (+/- 0.63) (n = 8). Egg production was temperature de
pendent, increasing from a mean of 1.5 e/w/d at 5 degrees C to 12.0 e/
w/d at 18 degrees C. Developmental rate was also temperature dependent
: larvae began hatching after 84 days at 6 degrees C, 28 days at 13 de
grees C, and 20 days at 18 degrees C. Eggs laid within the same 24 h p
eriod hatched over 3-7 days at 13-18 degrees C; this range was extende
d at decreasing temperatures. Egg viability was generally high: betwee
n 13 and 18 degrees C a mean of 92 % of larvae successfully emerged. H
owever, Viability declined at the highest and lowest temperatures (23
% hatching at 6 degrees C, 55 % at 8 degrees C and 47 % at 26 degrees
C). The implications for seasonal parasite transmission are discussed.