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Brief Summary

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Cymathoidae is a large family of isopods that are obligate parasites on marine, brackish and freshwater teleost fish worldwide, including many fish of economic importance.Almost all are found exclusively in shallow tropical and subtropical waters. This family includes some of the largest isopod species, reaching up to 75 mm (3 inches), but others reach only 3mm (0.1 inches) in length as adults.Their mouthparts are highly modified and specialized for blood feeding on fish hosts, and they are often asymmetric as a result of attaching to host surfaces (Brusca 1983; Thatcher 2000).

Most cymathids attach to their host by hooking onto the exterior scales or inhabit the gills or mouth (buccal cavity).Those that live in the buccal cavity can reduce or cause complete atrophy of the host’s tongue, and are called “tongue biters”.A few species (almost exclusively fresh-water species) burrow under the skin and live in a muscle tissue pocket.Some genera are highly specific on particular fish species, others are generalist and found on a variety of fish families, and even some invertebrate hosts, such as squid.While records are sketchy, there seems to be a correlation between isopod species with a broad geographic range and larger number of possible host species.Isopods also may have preferences for fish hosts that inhabit similar ecological niches, such as fish that school, rather than fish that are closely related (Brusca 1983; Thatcher 2000).

Cymathoid isopods are protandrous hermaphrodites, that is, they are born male and convert into females as adults.Young male stages disperse by swimming; attaching to and feeding from multiple hosts temporarily until they choose a permanent host, lose their swimming setae and become immobile. The first isopod to settle on a host will grow rapidly and transform into a female; subsequent colonizers will remain male to fertilize her.While all male stages are parasitic, females in some genera are non-feeding, although they survive only in association with a host (Brusca 1983; Thatcher 2000).

Cymathid isopods can cause anemia and reduced weight gain in their hosts, as well as promoting fungal and bacterial infections of the flesh lesions they create, block the reproductive output of their hosts in various ways (for e.g. see Fogelman et al. 2009), and even larvae can cause the death of temporary hosts they parasitize.Some isopods, however, appear to have limited effect on their hosts health, and Brusca and Gillian (1983) suggest that isopods inhabiting the buccal cavity of their hosts may in fact serve as a tongue replacement that is more efficient for feeding that the fish’s own tongue (cited in Thatcher 2000).

The cymathid family classification is poorly understood; many of the original taxa descriptions were cursory and not adequate to identify and distinguish species or even genera from one another.Furthermore, many species show a large degree of morphological variability.Since it is a large family with 42 genera and possibly 400 species (more than 325 recognized as of 2008; Ketmaier et al. 2008), re-assessing and describing taxa is a large project necessary for revision the family.Studies using molecular methods are augmenting these descriptions to estimate a phylogenetic reconstruction of the group, and improving taxonomic revision of this family (Ketmaier et al. 2008).

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Cymothoidae

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The Cymothoidae are a family of isopods in the suborder Cymothoida found in both marine and freshwater environments. Cymoithoids are ectoparasites, usually of fish, and they include the bizarre "tongue-biter" (Cymothoa exigua), which attaches to a fish's tongue, causing it to atrophy, and replaces the tongue with its own body.[2] Ceratothoa oestroides is one of the most devastating ectoparasites in Mediterranean aquaculture. Around 40 genera and more than 380 species of cymothoid are recognised.[3] Species of the Cymothoidae are generally found in warmer waters and rarely in the cool and cold climates.[4]

Characteristics

Cymothoids exhibit various adaptations to their parasitic lifestyles.[5] As juveniles, they are not specific in their requirements, and attach themselves temporarily to the skin of any fish. They produce anticoagulants and suck the fish's blood. They detach from their first host and later find another host. When they have found the correct species of fish for their adult development, they attach more permanently. As adults, most species require a particular host species, and are also site-specific. Locations for attachment chosen by different species of parasite include the skin, fins, gills, and mouth, while some species bore into muscle.[3]

Biology

Cymothoids are protandrous hermaphrodites; each juvenile develops first into a male, but if no females are nearby, the male later becomes a female and attaches permanently to the host. This female is able to secrete pheromones that prevent male cymothoids in the vicinity from becoming female. These parasites can cause serious damage to their hosts, ranging from slow growth rate, through tissue damage and anaemia, to death. Many host fish have mutualistic arrangements with certain shrimps such as Ancylomenes pedersoni, whereby the fish visits a "cleaning station" and the shrimps remove and feed on the cymothoid parasites.[6]

Classification

According to the World Register of Marine Species, the family contains these genera:[1]

References

  1. ^ a b Niel L. Bruce & Marilyn Schotte (2011). Schotte M, Boyko CB, Bruce NL, Poore GC, Taiti S, Wilson GD (eds.). "Cymothoidae". World Marine, Freshwater and Terrestrial Isopod Crustaceans database. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved December 9, 2011.
  2. ^ R. C. Brusca; M. R. Gilligan (1983). "Tongue replacement in a marine fish (Lutjanus guttatus) by a parasitic isopod (Crustacea: Isopoda)". Copeia. 1983 (3): 813–816. doi:10.2307/1444352. JSTOR 1444352.
  3. ^ a b Srour, Marc (2012-07-13). "Tongue Biters and Deep Sea Giants: The Cymothoida (Crustacea: Isopoda)". Teaching Biology. Archived from the original on 2014-06-06. Retrieved 2014-06-03.
  4. ^ Brusca, Richard C. (1981). "A monograph on the Isopoda Cymothoidae (Crustacea) of the eastern Pacific". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 73 (2): 117–199. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.1981.tb01592.x.
  5. ^ van der Wal, Serita; Haug, Joachim T. (2020). "Shape of attachment structures in parasitic isopodan crustaceans: the influence of attachment site and ontogeny". PeerJ. 8: e9181. doi:10.7717/peerj.9181. ISSN 2167-8359. PMC 7306222. PMID 32596034. open access
  6. ^ Bunkley-Williams, Lucy; Williams, Ernest H. Jr. (1998). "Ability of Pederson Cleaner Shrimp to Remove Juveniles of the Parasitic Cymothoid Isopod, Anilocra haemuli, from the Host". Crustaceana. 71 (8): 862–869. doi:10.1163/156854098x00888. JSTOR 20106067.
  7. ^ Hüseyin Özdikmen (2009). "A new name, Smenispa for the preoccupied isopod genus Enispa Schioedte & Meinert, 1884 (Isopoda: Cymothoidae)" (PDF). Munis Entomology & Zoology. 4 (2): 611–612.
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Cymothoidae: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

The Cymothoidae are a family of isopods in the suborder Cymothoida found in both marine and freshwater environments. Cymoithoids are ectoparasites, usually of fish, and they include the bizarre "tongue-biter" (Cymothoa exigua), which attaches to a fish's tongue, causing it to atrophy, and replaces the tongue with its own body. Ceratothoa oestroides is one of the most devastating ectoparasites in Mediterranean aquaculture. Around 40 genera and more than 380 species of cymothoid are recognised. Species of the Cymothoidae are generally found in warmer waters and rarely in the cool and cold climates.

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