Artículos de revistas
Diversity of helminth parasites in aquatic invertebrate hosts in Latin America: How much do we know?
Fecha
2017-03Registro en:
Aguirre Macedo, M. L.; May Tec, A. L.; Martinez Aquino, Andres; Cremonte, Florencia; Martorelli, Sergio Roberto; Diversity of helminth parasites in aquatic invertebrate hosts in Latin America: How much do we know?; Cambridge University Press; J. Helminthol.; 91; 2; 3-2017; 137-149
0022-149X
1475-2697
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Aguirre Macedo, M. L.
May Tec, A. L.
Martinez Aquino, Andres
Cremonte, Florencia
Martorelli, Sergio Roberto
Resumen
Helminths in aquatic invertebrate hosts have been overlooked in comparison with vertebrate hosts. Therefore, the known diversity, ecology and distribution of these host-parasite systems are very limited in terms of their taxonomic diversity, habitat and geographic regions. In this study we examined the published literature on helminth parasites of aquatic invertebrates from Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) to identify the state of the knowledge in the region and to identify patterns of helminth diversity. Results showed that 67% of the literature is from Argentina, Mexico and Brazil. We found records for 772 host-parasite associations. Most records relate to medically or economically important hosts. Molluscs were the most studied host group with 377 helminth records (80% trematodes). The lymnaeids and planorbids were the most studied molluscs across LAC. Arthropods were the second most studied host group with 78 helminth records (trematodes 38%, cestodes 24% and nematodes 20%), with shrimps and crabs being the most studied hosts. Host species with the largest number of helminth taxa were those with a larger sampling effort through time, usually in a small country region. No large geographical-scale studies were identified. In general, the knowledge is still too scarce to allow any zoogeographical or helminth diversity generalization, as most hosts have been studied locally and the studies on invertebrate hosts in LAC are substantially uneven among countries.