Category
| Common Name | Scientific Name | Distribution | Host SpeciesAlthough some species such as Branchiobdella parasitica, Cambarincola chirocephala, and Pterodrilus distichus are thought to be commensals or at most facultatively parasitic, other species, such as B. hexodonta, feeds on host tissue. Parasitic species occurring on the gills cause melanization of the gill filaments. Constant wounding by the feeding branchiobdellid may provide a route of entry for other pathogens but the intensity of branchiobdellid infection is usually too low to account for direct mortalities.
Alderman, D.J. and J.L. Polglase. 1988. Pathogens, parasites and commensals. In: D.M. Holdich and R.S. Lowery (eds.). Freshwater Crayfish Biology, Management and Exploitation. Timber Press, OR., p. 200-203.
Bishop, J.E. 1968. An ecological study of the branchiobdellid commensals (Annelida-Branchiobdellidae) of some mid-western Ontario crayfish. Canadian Journal of Zoology 46: 835-843.
Holt, P.C. 1975. The branchyobdellid (Annelida: Clitellata) associates of Astacoidean crawfish. In: Avault, J.W. (ed.), Freshwater Crayfish, Papers from the Second International Symposium on Freshwater Crayfish, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, U.S.A. 1974. Louisana State University, Baton Rouge, pp. 337-346.
Pennak, R.W. 1953. Fresh-water Invertebrates of the United States. The Ronald Press Company, New York. p. 284-300.
Pennak, R.W. 1989. Fresh-water invertebrates of the United States:Protozoa to Mollusca. 3rd edn. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York. p. 307-312
Bower, S.M., McGladdery, S.E. (2002): Synopsis of Infectious Diseases and Parasites of Commercially Exploited Shellfish: Branchiobdellida Annelid Parasitism of Crayfish.
URL: http://www.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/science/species-especes/shellfish-coquillages/diseases-maladies/pages/branapcy-eng.htm
Date last revised: April 2002
Comments to
Susan Bower