Parasites of cartilaginous fishes (Chondrichthyes) in South Africa - a neglected field of marine science
Abstract
Southern Africa is considered one of the world’s ‘hotspots’ for the diversity of cartilaginous fishes (Chondrichthyes), with
currently 204 reported species. Although numerous literature records and treatises on chondrichthyan fishes are available, a paucity
of information exists on the biodiversity of their parasites. Chondrichthyan fishes are parasitised by several groups of protozoan and
metazoan organisms that live either permanently or temporarily on and within their hosts. Reports of parasites infecting elasmobranchs
and holocephalans in South Africa are sparse and information on most parasitic groups is fragmentary or entirely lacking. Parasitic
copepods constitute the best-studied group with currently 70 described species (excluding undescribed species or nomina nuda) from
chondrichthyans. Given the large number of chondrichthyan species present in southern Africa, it is expected that only a mere fraction
of the parasite diversity has been discovered to date and numerous species await discovery and description. This review summarises
information on all groups of parasites of chondrichthyan hosts and demonstrates the current knowledge of chondrichthyan parasites in
South Africa. Checklists are provided displaying the host-parasite and parasite-host data known to date
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/31935https://folia.paru.cas.cz/pdfs/fol/2019/01/02.pdf
https://doi.org/10.14411/fp.2019.002