Cardiodectes bellottii

Species of crustacean From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cardiodectes bellottii is a species of copepods in the family Pennellidae.[1] It is a parasite of fish.[3] It is found in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans as well as the Mediterranean Sea; specimens from the Pacific were formerly treated as a separate species, Cardiodectes medusaeus.[3]

Quick facts Scientific classification, Binomial name ...
Cardiodectes bellottii
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Copepoda
Order: Siphonostomatoida
Family: Pennellidae
Genus: Cardiodectes
Species:
C. bellottii
Binomial name
Cardiodectes bellottii
(Richiardi, 1882)
Synonyms[1]
  • Peroderma bellotti Richiardi, 1882
  • Lernaeenicus medusaeus C. B. Wilson, 1908[2]
  • Cardiodectes medusaeus (Wilson, 1908)
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In the cnidarian Hydrichthys sarcotretis, parasitism is taken a stage further when the hydrozoan attaches itself to the C. bellottii. This is itself an ectoparasite of the northern lampfish (Stenobrachius leucopsarus) in the family Myctophidae. The copepod attaches itself to the bulbus arteriosus of the fish. Such a parasitic chain is known as hyperparasitism.[4] C. bellottii requires two hosts for proper development. It will go through five successive postembryonic stages, then only the post-mating females will go into the pericardial cavity of a lanternfish.[5] The actions of the copepod castrate its fish host. Both male and female fish do not reproduce and seem to grow faster when attacked by the copepod and it seems to have a negligible energy demand from them.[6] The hydrozoan parasite castrates the copepod, a process called hypercastration.[4]

References

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