First report of endosymbionts in Dreissena polymorpha from the brackish Curonian Lagoon, SE Baltic Sea

We report the first results of a parasitological study of<i>Dreissena polymorpha</i> (zebra mussels) from the brackishCuronian Lagoon, SE Baltic Sea. Zebra mussels were collected monthlyfrom May to October 2011 from a site near the mouth of the River Nemunas.Three types of endosymbionts...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Romualda Chuševė, Sergey E. Mastitsky, Anastazja Zaiko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2012-11-01
Series:Oceanologia
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.iopan.gda.pl/oceanologia/54_4.html#A9
id doaj-eb43180af24741a1ba31d86f8b6dfc5a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-eb43180af24741a1ba31d86f8b6dfc5a2020-11-25T00:32:41ZengElsevierOceanologia0078-32342012-11-01544701713First report of endosymbionts in Dreissena polymorpha from the brackish Curonian Lagoon, SE Baltic Sea Romualda ChuševėSergey E. MastitskyAnastazja ZaikoWe report the first results of a parasitological study of<i>Dreissena polymorpha</i> (zebra mussels) from the brackishCuronian Lagoon, SE Baltic Sea. Zebra mussels were collected monthlyfrom May to October 2011 from a site near the mouth of the River Nemunas.Three types of endosymbionts were found in the mantle cavity andvisceral mass of the molluscs during dissections, i.e. thecommensal ciliate <i>Conchophthirus acuminatus</i> and parasitic ciliate<i>Ophryoglena</i> sp., and rarely encountered, unidentified nematodes.The abundances of <i>C. cuminatus</i> and <i>Ophryoglena</i> sp.were positively associated with host shell length and watertemperature, but no effect of water salinity was detected.As the endosymbionts are either highly host-specific to zebra mussels(<i>C. acuminatus</i> and <i>Ophryoglena</i> sp.) or are probablyfree-living organisms that inadvertently infect the molluscs (nematodes),we conclude that the presence of <i>D. polymorpha</i> in theCuronian Lagoon does not pose any serious parasitologicalrisk to native biota. We emphasize, however, that this conclusionshould be treated with caution as it is based on a study conductedonly at a single location. Our work extends the currentlyscarce records of <i>D. polymorpha</i> parasites and commensals frombrackish waters, and adds to a better understanding of the ecologicalimpact this highly invasive mollusc causes in the areas it has invaded.http://www.iopan.gda.pl/oceanologia/54_4.html#A9<i>Dreissena polymorpha</i><i> Conchophthirus acuminatus</i><i>Ophryoglena</i> sp.Seasonal dynamicsBrackish water
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Romualda Chuševė
Sergey E. Mastitsky
Anastazja Zaiko
spellingShingle Romualda Chuševė
Sergey E. Mastitsky
Anastazja Zaiko
First report of endosymbionts in Dreissena polymorpha from the brackish Curonian Lagoon, SE Baltic Sea
Oceanologia
<i>Dreissena polymorpha</i>
<i> Conchophthirus acuminatus</i>
<i>Ophryoglena</i> sp.
Seasonal dynamics
Brackish water
author_facet Romualda Chuševė
Sergey E. Mastitsky
Anastazja Zaiko
author_sort Romualda Chuševė
title First report of endosymbionts in Dreissena polymorpha from the brackish Curonian Lagoon, SE Baltic Sea
title_short First report of endosymbionts in Dreissena polymorpha from the brackish Curonian Lagoon, SE Baltic Sea
title_full First report of endosymbionts in Dreissena polymorpha from the brackish Curonian Lagoon, SE Baltic Sea
title_fullStr First report of endosymbionts in Dreissena polymorpha from the brackish Curonian Lagoon, SE Baltic Sea
title_full_unstemmed First report of endosymbionts in Dreissena polymorpha from the brackish Curonian Lagoon, SE Baltic Sea
title_sort first report of endosymbionts in dreissena polymorpha from the brackish curonian lagoon, se baltic sea
publisher Elsevier
series Oceanologia
issn 0078-3234
publishDate 2012-11-01
description We report the first results of a parasitological study of<i>Dreissena polymorpha</i> (zebra mussels) from the brackishCuronian Lagoon, SE Baltic Sea. Zebra mussels were collected monthlyfrom May to October 2011 from a site near the mouth of the River Nemunas.Three types of endosymbionts were found in the mantle cavity andvisceral mass of the molluscs during dissections, i.e. thecommensal ciliate <i>Conchophthirus acuminatus</i> and parasitic ciliate<i>Ophryoglena</i> sp., and rarely encountered, unidentified nematodes.The abundances of <i>C. cuminatus</i> and <i>Ophryoglena</i> sp.were positively associated with host shell length and watertemperature, but no effect of water salinity was detected.As the endosymbionts are either highly host-specific to zebra mussels(<i>C. acuminatus</i> and <i>Ophryoglena</i> sp.) or are probablyfree-living organisms that inadvertently infect the molluscs (nematodes),we conclude that the presence of <i>D. polymorpha</i> in theCuronian Lagoon does not pose any serious parasitologicalrisk to native biota. We emphasize, however, that this conclusionshould be treated with caution as it is based on a study conductedonly at a single location. Our work extends the currentlyscarce records of <i>D. polymorpha</i> parasites and commensals frombrackish waters, and adds to a better understanding of the ecologicalimpact this highly invasive mollusc causes in the areas it has invaded.
topic <i>Dreissena polymorpha</i>
<i> Conchophthirus acuminatus</i>
<i>Ophryoglena</i> sp.
Seasonal dynamics
Brackish water
url http://www.iopan.gda.pl/oceanologia/54_4.html#A9
work_keys_str_mv AT romualdachuseve firstreportofendosymbiontsindreissenapolymorphafromthebrackishcuronianlagoonsebalticsea
AT sergeyemastitsky firstreportofendosymbiontsindreissenapolymorphafromthebrackishcuronianlagoonsebalticsea
AT anastazjazaiko firstreportofendosymbiontsindreissenapolymorphafromthebrackishcuronianlagoonsebalticsea
_version_ 1725319524509548544