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Diseases of Aquatic Organisms

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DAO 158:195-200 (2024)  -  DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/dao03796

NOTE
Pennella balaenoptera actively select injured cetacean skin as attachment sites, making them potentially useful forensic tags

O. Chaieb1,2,#, S. Ten3,*,#, F. J. Aznar3,#

1Laboratoire de Biodiversité Marine, Institut National des Sciences et Technologie de la Mer, 5000 Monastir, Tunisia
2University of Carthage, 1054 Tunis, Tunisia
3Marine Zoology Unit, Cavanilles Institute of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology, University of Valencia, 46980 Paterna, Valencia, Spain
#All authors contributed equally to this manuscript
*Corresponding author:

ABSTRACT: Cetaceans harbor multiple epibionts on their external surface, and these attach to particular microhabitats. Understanding what drives the selection of attachment sites is relevant for refining the use of epibionts as indicators of their hosts. We report on about 100 females of the mesoparasitic copepod Pennella balaenoptera attached to a dead Cuvier’s beaked whale Ziphius cavirostris stranded in Tunisia (western Mediterranean); the first report of P. balaenoptera in this country. The copepods were exclusively attached to numerous incisive, likely anthropogenic, wounds found on the host’s skin. This finding suggests that newly recruited females may actively seek skin areas where physical penetration is facilitated; a factor that may help explain patterns of microhabitat selection by Pennella spp., and perhaps other pennellids, on their hosts. The estimated age of parasitization by P. balaenoptera (supported by age estimations of the co-occurring epibiotic barnacle Conchoderma virgatum) also suggests that the cetacean host likely survived these injuries, at least initially, and the presumed cause of death was starvation due to entanglement in a fishing net.


KEY WORDS: Cetacean health · Parasite attachment · Skin injury · Epibiont · Forensics · Indicator


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Cite this article as: Chaieb O, Ten S, Aznar FJ (2024) Pennella balaenoptera actively select injured cetacean skin as attachment sites, making them potentially useful forensic tags. Dis Aquat Org 158:195-200. https://doi.org/10.3354/dao03796

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