Piscicolidae Explained

The Piscicolidae are a family of jawless leeches in the order Rhynchobdellida that are parasitic on fish. They occur in both freshwater and seawater, have cylindrical bodies, and typically have a large, bell-shaped, anterior sucker with which they cling to their host. Some of the leeches in this family have external gills, outgrowths of the body wall projecting laterally, the only group of leeches to exchange gases in this way.[1]

Worldwide, around 60 genera and 100 species of leeches are in this family, all parasitic on the blood of marine, estuarine, and freshwater fishes. These leeches are less common in the tropics, and more abundant in temperate and polar waters.[2]

Taxonomy

Historically, the Piscicolidae have been divided into three subfamilies: the Pontobdellinae, characterised by two pairs of pulsatile vesicles on each urosome segment; the Pontobdellinae, characterised by a single pair of pulsatile vesicles on each urosome segment; and the Platybdellinae, with no pulsatile vesicles.[2] However, molecular phylogenetic analyses performed by Williams and Burreson in 2006, do not support these subdivisions. The Piscicolidae were confirmed as being monophyletic, but the Platybdellinae were shown to be polyphyletic with four distinct clades, and the Piscicolinae were similarly polyphyletic, again with four distinct clades, and the Pontobdellinae were paraphyletic with respect to the genus Oxytonostoma.[3]

Ecology

The Piscicolidae are parasitic on the blood of fishes. They produce a variety of anticoagulants to help them drink blood freely.[4] [5] Some species are host-specific, while others can accept a larger range of hosts. Some, such as the European Piscicola geometra, take a blood meal and then drop off the host and hide somewhere while they digest the blood;[6] some, mostly in marine or estuarine habitats with soft substrates, attach themselves temporarily to a crustacean after leaving their fish host; others remain attached to a fish semipermanently. Leeches are hermaphrodites, and mating may take place on or off the fish host, but in either case, the cocoon, usually containing a single egg, is deposited elsewhere, usually stuck to a stone or piece of vegetation, or even to the carapace of a crustacean. When the egg hatches, the juvenile leech has about a week to find a suitable fish host for itself.[7]

Selected species

Notes and References

  1. Book: Invertebrate Zoology, 7th edition . Ruppert . Edward E. . Fox . Richard, S. . Barnes . Robert D. . 2004 . Cengage Learning . 978-81-315-0104-7 . 480 .
  2. Book: Light, Sol Felty. The Light and Smith Manual: Intertidal Invertebrates from Central California to Oregon. 2007 . University of California Press . 978-0-520-23939-5 . 303.
  3. Williams, Julianne I. . Burreson, Eugene M. . 2006 . Phylogeny of the fish leeches (Oligochaeta, Hirudinida, Piscicolidae) based on nuclear and mitochondrial genes and morphology . Zoologica Scripta . 35 . 6 . 627–639 . 10.1111/j.1463-6409.2006.00246.x . 85857270 . free .
  4. Kvist. Sebastian. Oceguera-Figueroa. Alejandro. Tessler. Michael. Jiménez-Armenta. Jossué. Freeman. Robert M.. Giribet. Gonzalo. Siddall. Mark E.. August 2016. When predator becomes prey: investigating the salivary transcriptome of the shark-feeding leech Pontobdella macrothela (Hirudinea: Piscicolidae). Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 10.1111/zoj.12473. 0024-4082.
  5. Tessler. Michael. Marancik. David. Champagne. Donald. Dove. Alistair. Camus. Alvin. Siddall. Mark E.. Kvist. Sebastian. June 2018. Marine leech anticoagulant diversity and evolution. Journal of Parasitology. 104. 3. 210–220. 10.1645/17-64. 29505345 . 0022-3395. free.
  6. Web site: Fish leech (Piscicola geometra) . Paul, Karen . Pond Life . 18 June 2018.
  7. Book: Felder, Darryl L. . Camp, David K. . Gulf of Mexico Origin, Waters, and Biota: Biodiversity . 2009 . Texas A&M University Press . 978-1-60344-269-5 . 789–790.