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Subject: Re: experimentally parasitize small fish?
From: Anthony Mazeroll <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To:Scientific forum on fish and fisheries <[log in to unmask]>
Date:Thu, 27 Mar 2008 08:11:20 -0700
Content-Type:text/plain
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From my experiences with fish suppliers, it would be highly unlikely that the fish were "clean".  If you ever go into a supplier’s facility, the fish are back into tanks in numbers that would astound you.  I would de-parasitize all the fish before you infect them, just to be safe.
 
 
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Anthony I. Mazeroll, Ph.D.
Professor of Biology
Soka University of America



No human being, however great, or powerful, was ever so free as a FISH.
John Ruskin (1819–1900), English art critic


----- Original Message ----
From: Michael Robinson <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2008 10:53:45 AM
Subject: experimentally parasitize small fish?

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Dear list,

I am looking for information on ways to experimentally parasitize small
freshwater fish.  I am not too concerned about the type of parasite, as long as
I can collect them afterwards.  I have found some information (see below), but I
was hoping someone would have some advice or experiences that they wouldn't mind
sharing.

Thank you very much!
Mike


What I am thinking and what I have found:

I want to parasitize small, readily available freshwater fish.  I am thinking of
either guppies (Poecilia reticulata) or zebrafish (Danio rerio).  I have to have
a non-parasitized control group (no parasites at all), so I figured I could get
all fish from a supplier so they were clean of ALL parasites and then infect
one half of them.  Is it reasonable that I can get non-parasitized fish from a
supplier?

It looks like I can parasitize the fish with Gyrodactylus (a monogean) either by
placing the parasite on the fish directly or housing parasitized fish with
non-parasitized fish.  I have a number of references on this already.  I get
the impression that these worms are easy to obtain from fish stores and
possibly from the wild.  Is that true?

For a variety of reasons, I would prefer to use Camallanus (or a similar
gastrointestinal nematode parasite).  I know that McMinn (1990) experimentally
infested guppies with Camallanus, but I’m not quite sure how he did it.  Can
anyone shed light on this for me?  Does anyone know where I can find him?

McMinn, H. (1990) Effects of the nematode parasite Camallanus cotti on sexual
and nonsexual behaviors in the guppy (Poecilia reticulata). Am. Zool. 30(2):
245-249


Again, thank you all very much for your time!





_______________________________________________________________________________

Michael P. Robinson 
Dept. of Biology              University of Miami
P.O. Box 249118              Coral Gables FL 33124-0421 

[log in to unmask]  web: www.bio.miami.edu/robinson 
305-284-4313                  fax: 305-284-3039
_______________________________________________________________________________

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