Trematodes of fishes of the Indo-west Pacific: told and untold richness

被引:0
|
作者
Thomas H. Cribb
Rodney A. Bray
Pablo E. Diaz
Daniel C. Huston
Olena Kudlai
Storm B. Martin
Russell Q.-Y. Yong
Scott C. Cutmore
机构
[1] The University of Queensland,School of Biological Sciences
[2] Natural History Museum,Department of Life Sciences
[3] Czech Academy of Sciences,Laboratory of Helminthology, Institute of Parasitology, Biology Centre
来源
Systematic Parasitology | 2016年 / 93卷
关键词
Fish Species; Great Barrier Reef; Small Fish; Fish Fauna; Fish Family;
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The Indo-west Pacific is a marine bioregion stretching from the east coast of Africa to Hawaii, French Polynesia and Easter Island. An assessment of the literature from the region found reports of 2,582 trematode species infecting 1,485 fish species. Reports are concentrated in larger fishes, undoubtedly reflecting the tendency for larger hosts to be infected by more species of parasites as well as a collecting bias. Many hundreds of fish species, including many from families known to be rich in trematodes, have yet to be reported as hosts. Despite some areas (the Great Barrier Reef, Hawaii and the waters off China, India and Japan) receiving sustained attention, none can be considered to be comprehensively known. Several regions, most importantly in East Africa, French Polynesia and the Coral Triangle, are especially poorly known. The fauna of the Indo-west Pacific has been reported so unevenly that we consider it impossible to predict the true trematode richness for the region. We conclude that the greatest gap in our understanding is of the geographical distribution of species in the Indo-west Pacific. This is highlighted by the fact that 87% of trematodes in the region have been reported no more than five times. The reliable recognition of species is a major problem in this field; molecular approaches offer prospects for resolution of species identification but have been little adopted to date.
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页码:237 / 247
页数:10
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