Marine mammal recovery is associated with the resurgence of a nematode parasite
收藏DataCite Commons2026-01-29 更新2026-04-25 收录
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https://datadryad.org/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.66t1g1kcs
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As the oceans change, the abundance of parasites and risk of infection to
marine mammals may also be changing. Nematodes in the family Anisakidae
can harm marine mammals and recent studies have revealed a global increase
in these parasites, but the cause is unknown. We sought to determine how
anisakid risk in Puget Sound had changed over 98 years by conducting
parasitological analysis of museum specimens of the prey species of marine
mammals. We dissected Pacific Herring, Walleye Pollock, Surf Smelt,
Pacific Hake, and Copper Rockfish collected between 1920 and 2018. We
found that the larval anisakid Contracaecum spp. was the most abundant
marine mammal parasite in these prey fish. We used a state-space model to
assess the relationship between Contracaecum spp. abundance and time, with
harbor seal abundance and sea surface temperature as potential correlates.
We detected an overall decline in Contracaecum spp. abundance with a
recent uptick starting in 1989, which was correlated with increasing
harbor seal abundance. While these data reveal a regional trend, increases
in marine mammal parasites in response to marine mammal protection have
occurred elsewhere, and suggest that the phenomenon might be more
widespread than is currently appreciated. Marine mammals in Puget Sound
are probably less burdened by anisakids than they were historically, but
the recent recovery of anisakids could impact the health of these hosts,
which today face very different stressors than they did in the past.
提供机构:
Dryad
创建时间:
2025-09-12



