Helminth parasites and epizoites in common dolphins (genus Delphinus) from coastal Peru and Ecuador

Abstract

A twenty-five year old dataset of parasites in long-beaked and short-beaked common dolphins (Delphinus spp.), using fisheries as an opportunistic platform of access, registered seven species of helminths and one epizoite, being a unique dataset for the Southeast Pacific. Sampling was conducted in 1985-2000 at six fishing ports in Peru and Ecuador where cetaceans were landed from interactions with small-scale fisheries. From a total of 473 common dolphins examined, we identified helminths including three species of Trematoda: Nasitrema globicephalae, Pholeter gastrophilus, and Braunina cordiformis; three species of Nematoda, including Anisakis spp., Crassicauda spp., and Halocercus sp.; and two cestodes, Tetrabothrius forsteri and Clistobothrium delphini. No acanthocephalans were observed. No statistically significant sexual and ontogenetic variation in helminth prevalence was detected, after which samples were pooled. The highest prevalences in the long-beaked common dolphin (n = 440) were observed for N. globicephalae (87.9%, 29 infested/33 sampled) in cranial sinuses, Crassicauda sp1. (80%, 4/5) in mammary glands, followed by Cl. delphini (28.6%, 2/7) in the blubber, and P. gastrophilus (23%, 26/113) in the pyloric stomach. Although comparative testing was unfeasible due to minimal samples of short-beaked common dolphin (n = 33), several of the same helminth species were found; but not N. globicephalae nor B. cordiformis. No cyamids were encountered while pseudo-stalked barnacles Xenobalanus globicipitis were common. Although no new (global) helminth host records were revealed for common dolphins, this study presents a first checklist of parasites separately for the Southeast Pacific long-beaked and short-beaked common dolphins. Future work should include exhaustive laboratory-based necropsies, enhanced sampling of the short-beaked form, review data from recent parasite collections, focus on intermediate hosts and parasitic pathology, including potential human health impact from consumption of small cetaceans

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Latin American Journal of Aquatic Mammals (LAJAM)

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