Hydrichthys

Hydrichthys
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Cnidaria
Class: Hydrozoa
Order: Anthoathecata
Suborder: Filifera
Family: Pandeidae
Genus: Hydrichthys
Fewkes, 1887 [1]
Species
See text

Hydrichthys is a genus of colonial marine hydrozoans that used to be placed in the family Hydrichthyidae but is now included in Pandeidae.[1] The polyps of members of this genus are parasitic. The polyp attaches itself to a fish, and in one species exhibits hyperparasitism by attaching itself to a copepod, itself the parasite of a fish.

Parasitism

The life history of hydrozoans typically has a larval, polyp stage and a bell-shaped medusa stage. In Hydrichthys, the polyp has no tentacles but develops a root-like stolon which it thrusts through the skin of its host, usually a fish, to suck the blood and body fluids. During the medusa stage, Hydrichthys lives independently in the ocean. In one species, Hydrichthys sarcotretis, parasitism is taken a stage further when the hydrozoan attaches itself to the copepod Cardiodectes medusaeus. This is itself an ectoparasite of lanternfish in the family Myctophidae. The copepod attaches itself to the bulbus arteriosus of the fish. Such a parasitic chain is known as hyperparasitism.[2] 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.[3] The hydrozoan parasite castrates the copepod, a process called hypercastration.[2]

Species

The World Register of Marine Species recognises the following species: [1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Hydrichthys - Fewkes, 1887 World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 2011-10-10.
  2. 1 2 Bush, Albert O. (2001). Parasitism: the diversity and ecology of animal parasites. Google Books. p. 285. ISBN 978-0-521-66447-9.
  3. "Effects of the copepod Cardiodectes medusaeus on the laternfish Stenobrachius leucopsarus with notes on hypercastration by the hydroid Hydrichthys sp.". Canadian Journal of Zoology. 56 (11): 2372–6. 1978. doi:10.1139/z78-321.
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