DallasFishBox.com  
•  HOME  •  PHOTO GALLERY  •  CALENDAR  •  MY ACCOUNT  •  MEMBER MAP  •  FORUMS  •
Modules   
 
HomeHome  
    Home
Members  
    Private Messages
    Profile
    Your Account
    Members List
    Groups
Community  
    Supporters
    Search
    Forums
    Surveys
Statistics  
    Statistics
    Top 10
Files & Links  
    Downloads
    Web Links
News  
    News
    Submit News
    Topics
Other  
    Site Map
    Donations
    Stories Archive
    Content
    Recommend Us
    Feedback
    FAQ
    Docs
    gallery2
Photo Gallery   
 
266g

Owner: rchan11

Last Seen   
 
albino_concept: 5 m ago
TXFRONT: 10 m ago
scottapalmer: 13 m ago
puru: 17 m ago
hanz1296: 21 m ago
ShermanGirl: 24 m ago
AnotherWoogie: 25 m ago
wicked_dynamics: 52 m ago
bristlenosedude: 56 m ago
flamenco-t: 1 h, 2 m ago
Khrister: 1 h, 23 m ago
fatfutures: 1 h, 26 m ago
Lakea: 1 h, 48 m ago
BPSEOE: 1 h, 51 m ago
MantainHomeostasis: 1 h, 54 m ago
bwalker75205: 1 h, 55 m ago
Welcome to DallasFishBox.com!(Launched 2Aug06)

Welcome! We're a new Dallas Freshwater Fish website. Our intent is to build a community to talk about the husbandry of freshwater fish in the Dallas and North Texas area. With the help of our members I believe we can do a pretty good job of pulling together info from african cichlids, to koi, to livebearers, bettas, plants, and tropical fish aquaria in general. So, come on in and JOIN US. It's FREE! Come and view the FORUMS and contribute to or learn from an area of your choosing or just have some fun with folks that like fish as well. The Dallas aquarium / fishkeeping hobby needs you! Afterall, It's Fish, it's Aquariums, it's Freshwater, it's Dallas. What's not to like?


The next 0 Events.

 
Sorry, we have no current events available.
All EventsAll Events ExhibitionsMeeting
Other 

Tongue-eating louse found on supermarket snapper

Tongue-eating louse found on supermarket snapper

A diner preparing a Red snapper for lunch found something rather nasty inside the mouth of the fish.

Concerned at what they'd discovered inside the snapper's gob, the diner contacted Lewisham Council's Environmental Health Department who enlisted the help of experts at the Horniman Museum in Forest Hill, London.

Keeper of Natural History at the Horniman, Dr Jim Brock, identified the freaky creature as a type of parasitic crustacean called Cymothoa exigua.

This "tongue-eating louse" is actually a type of isopod and Brock says it's believed to be the only creature known to eat and replace the organ of its host.

Dr Brock said: "I have not seen this in all my 13 years at the museum so it's a remarkable find.

 "It survives by drinking from the artery..."

"The tongue louse enters through the fish's gills, using claws to attach itself to the base of the snapper's tongue and survives by drinking from an artery which supplies its blood.

"Eventually the tongue is reduced to a stub. However, the parasite is now large enough to replace the tongue and as it manipulates the fish's food, it also dines out for free on the freed food particles when the fish eats.

"We believe it to be indigenous to the Gulf of California, and I suspect the tongue louse was either imported here in the mouth of the red snapper or perhaps it has started to appear in European seas.

"We intend to exhibit this extraordinary find in the museum's forthcoming redisplay of the Natural History Gallery."

Fact File


Common name: Tongue-eating louse
Scientific name: Cymothoa exigua
Order: Isopoda
Suborder: Flabellifera
Family: Cymothoidae
Symptoms: C. exigua is the only known parasite which replaces the organ of its host. So much blood is removed from the tongue of the fish by the blood-thirsty parasite that the tongue atrophies and shrinks to a stub. The parasite remains in the place of the tongue and is used by the fish in the same way as its tongue was.
Notes: All members of the family Cymothoidae are fish parasites and representatives occur in both freshwater and marine environments. Most attach themselves either to the buccal cavity, tongue or gill chamber. Over 400 species are known, many of which are found in the Amazon basin where the family has undergone a massive radiation. The genus Cymothoa was described by Fabricius in 1787 and currently includes 43 valid species. C. exigua is most commonly seen on snappers members of the Lutjanus genus.

Posted by rlillard on Thu Aug 23, 2007 7:30 am
| Score: 0)
Evo User Info   
 
Good evening 
Anonymous



Register
Lost Password
Username
Password

 Online:   
Member(s):

Guest(s):

Most Ever Online:   
 Guest(s): 24
 Member(s): 7
 Total: 31

Forums Forums:   
 Posts: 31,267
 Topics: 3,252
Forums   
Link to us   
 
DallasFishBox.com

Total Website Hits   
 
We received
2461173
page views since Augest 2006



Spambot Killer
Site Map

[News Feed] [Forums Feed] [Downloads Feed] [Web Links Feed] [Validate robots.txt]


PHP-Nuke Copyright © 2006 by Francisco Burzi.
All logos, trademarks and posts in this site are property of their respective owners, all the rest © 2006 by the site owner.
Powered by Nuke-Evolution.

[ Page Generation: 1.25 Seconds | DB Queries: 59 ]

.
:: fisubsilver shadow phpbb2 style by Daz :: PHP-Nuke theme by coldblooded (www.nukemods.com) ::