enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Fish diseases and parasites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_diseases_and_parasites

    Parasites can provide information about host population ecology. In fisheries biology, for example, parasite communities can be used to distinguish distinct populations of the same fish species co-inhabiting a region. [9] Additionally, parasites possess a variety of specialized traits and life-history strategies that enable them to colonize hosts.

  3. Myxobolus cerebralis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myxobolus_cerebralis

    Alternatively, a fish can become infected by eating an infected oligochaete. Infected tubificids can release triactinomyxons for at least a year. The triactinomyxon spores are carried by the water currents, where they can infect a salmonid through the skin. Penetration of the fish by these spores takes only a few seconds.

  4. Bucephalidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bucephalidae

    They are parasites of fish from freshwater, marine, and brackish water habitat types. [2] The name Bucephalus, meaning "ox head", was originally applied to the genus Bucephalus because of the horn-like appearance of the forked tail (furcae) of its cercaria larva. By what Manter calls a "curious circumstance", horns are also suggested by the ...

  5. Black spot disease (fish) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_spot_disease_(fish)

    It is caused by larvae (metacercariae) of Diplostomatidae or Heterophyidae flatworms, which are encysted in the skin. It can affect both freshwater and marine [1] fish. [2] [3] It appears as tiny black spots on the skin, fins, and flesh of the fish. The life cycle of the parasite typically involves a fish-eating bird, a snail and a fish. [4]

  6. Ichthyophthirius multifiliis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ichthyophthirius_multifiliis

    The name literally translates as "the fish louse with many children". The parasite can infect most freshwater fish species and, in contrast to many other parasites, shows low host specificity. It penetrates gill epithelia, skin and fins of the fish host and resides as a feeding stage (the trophont) inside the epidermis.

  7. Lernaea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lernaea

    Manual removal of the parasite is one of the surest ways to get rid of it; this can be done by holding the fish in the hand and removing the parasites with a pair of tweezers, being careful not to break the tail off leaving the head embedded and dipping the fish back into water every few seconds so it can breathe. Sometimes the parasite can ...

  8. A tropical parasite, passed through the bite of a sand fly ...

    www.aol.com/tropical-parasite-passed-bite-sand...

    There’s another blood-sucking biter Americans need to guard against because it can spread disease: the sand fly. A tropical parasite, passed through the bite of a sand fly, is causing skin ...

  9. Argulus foliaceus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argulus_foliaceus

    Argulus foliaceus. Argulus foliaceus, also known as the common fish louse, is a species of fish lice in the family Argulidae. [1] It is "the most common and widespread native argulid in the Palaearctic" [2] and "one of the most widespread crustacean ectoparasites of freshwater fish in the world", considering its distribution and range of hosts. [3]