The historical ecology of yellow perch (Perca flavescens[Mitchill]) and their parasites

Aim To determine the origins of the host-parasite association between among yellow perch (Perca flavescens [Mitchill]) and the parasites Crepidostomum cooperi Hopkins, Proteocephalus pearsei La Rue and Urocleidus adspectus Beverly Burton. Of secondary interest are the parasites Bunodera luciopercae...

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Published in:Journal of biogeography Vol. 27; no. 6; pp. 1337 - 1347
Main Authors: Carney, Joseph P., Dick, Terry A.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford, UK Blackwell Science Ltd 01-11-2000
Blackwell Science
Blackwell
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Summary:Aim To determine the origins of the host-parasite association between among yellow perch (Perca flavescens [Mitchill]) and the parasites Crepidostomum cooperi Hopkins, Proteocephalus pearsei La Rue and Urocleidus adspectus Beverly Burton. Of secondary interest are the parasites Bunodera luciopercae (Muller) and Proteocephalus percae (Muller) predictably associated with the Eurasian perch. Location The areas considered are the Holarctic, since the upper-Cretaceous, and contemporary North America. Methods Published and new information from host and parasite phylogenies, palaeontology, palaeogeography and plate tectonics and host biology is incorporated to assess the origins of yellow perch and several of its parasites. This information is used to determine the origins for these host-parasite associations. Results Cladistic analysis suggests a Laurasian origin for Percidae and Perca, and that Perca is sister to the other genera in the family. Parasite phylogenies support a North American origin for the three species associated with yellow perch and a Laurasian origin for B. luciopercae. Proteocephalus pearsei and P. percae are not sister taxa. The fossil record for Perca dates to the Miocene in Europe and the Pleistocene in North America. North America and Europe were connected across the North Atlantic since at least the upper Cretaceous with separation complete by the Miocene. Europe was separated from Asia by the Obik Sea from the late Cretaceous until the Oligocene. Western cordillera orogeny and its accompanying high rates of water flow and Pleistocene glaciation represent barriers to Perca dispersal. Main conclusions The origin of Perca in North America dates at least to the late Oligocene when North America and Europe were connected across the North Atlantic and Europe and Asia were separate landmasses, and does not result from Pleistocene dispersal across Beringia from Asia. The present disjunction of Perca species in North America and Europe is due to the vicariant separation of North America and Europe. Based on the available information, yellow perch and its parasites have a North America origin. The association between yellow perch and the parasites in all cases is a consequence of host switching from other sympatric host species in North America and is not explained by co-speciation. Even the association between the host-specific Urocleidus adspectus and yellow perch originated with a host switch and is not due to co-speciation. The basis for this host switching is geographical and ecological sympatry, especially shared feeding habits, with other North American fish hosts.
Bibliography:istex:76C8F8DE3176794B71B58831C7DCEBBEC56139BE
ArticleID:JBI511
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ISSN:0305-0270
1365-2699
DOI:10.1046/j.1365-2699.2000.00511.x