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Rapid proliferation of the parasitic copepod,Salmincola californiensis (Dana), on kokanee salmon,Oncorhynchus nerka (Walbaum), in a large Colorado reservoir
Authors:Jesse M. Lepak  Adam G. Hansen  Mevin B. Hooten  Daniel Brauch  Estevan M. Vigil
Abstract:Ecologically and economically valuable Pacific salmon and trout (Oncorhynchus spp.) are widespread and susceptible to the ectoparasite Salmincola californiensis (Dana). The range of this freshwater copepod has expanded, and in 2015, Scaliforniensis was observed in Blue Mesa Reservoir, Colorado, USA, an important kokanee salmon (Onerka, Walbaum) egg source for sustaining fisheries. Few Scaliforniensis were detected on kokanee salmon in 2016 (<10% prevalence; 2 adult Scaliforniensis maximum). By 2020, age-3 kokanee salmon had 100% Scaliforniensis prevalence and mean intensity exceeding 50 adult copepods. Year and kokanee salmon age/maturity (older/mature) were consistently identified as significant predictors of Scaliforniensis prevalence/intensity. There was evidence that Scaliforniensis spread rapidly, but their population growth was maximized at the initiation (the first 2–3 years) of the invasion. Gills and heads of kokanee salmon carried the highest Scaliforniensis loads. Scaliforniensis population growth appears to be slowing, but Scaliforniensis expansion occurred concomitant with myriad environmental/biological factors. These factors and inherent variance in Scaliforniensis count data may have obscured patterns that continued monitoring of parasite–host dynamics, when Scaliforniensis abundance is more stable, might reveal. The rapid proliferation of Scaliforniensis indicates that in 5 years a system can go from a light infestation to supporting hosts carrying hundreds of parasites, and concern remains about the sustainability of this kokanee salmon population.
Keywords:gill lice  intensity  invasion  maturity  prevalence
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