Epibiont Cohabitation in Freshwater Shrimp Neocaridina davidi with the Description of Two Species New to Science, Cladogonium kumaki sp. nov. and Monodiscus kumaki sp. nov., and Redescription of Scutariella japonica and Holtodrilus truncatus

This contribution presents the occurrence of epibiotic species associated with shrimp collected in the wild, aquaculture ponds, and aquaria. A total of 900 shrimp are imported from Taiwan, three-quarters of which host at least one of the recorded epibionts. Among those epibionts, two species new to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Animals (Basel) 2023-05, Vol.13 (10), p.1616
Hauptverfasser: Maciaszek, Rafał, Świderek, Wiesław, Prati, Sebastian, Huang, Chih-Yang, Karaban, Kamil, Kaliszewicz, Anita, Jabłońska, Aleksandra
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This contribution presents the occurrence of epibiotic species associated with shrimp collected in the wild, aquaculture ponds, and aquaria. A total of 900 shrimp are imported from Taiwan, three-quarters of which host at least one of the recorded epibionts. Among those epibionts, two species new to science are discovered, sp. nov. and sp. nov., while the other two, and , are redescribed. The largest number of epibionts is found in shrimp collected from aquaculture ponds and the lowest in individuals from aquaria. Epibiont occurrence differs across designated microhabitats. The epibionts may be introduced alongside their host outside their native range, and their presence may affect shrimp breeding rates. Thus, more control over them should be provided. Their spread can be limited by removal from the host during molting or manually, as well as by using interspecies interactions.
ISSN:2076-2615
2076-2615
DOI:10.3390/ani13101616