This affiliate investigate the seasonal difference of acanthocephala infecting reptile headed fish in the Hooghly community of West Bengal, India. Snakehead fishes are widely consumed during the whole of South East Asia, China and India because of their good taste of core and high fiber values such as closeness of prostaglandins, thromboxane and Omega-6 fatty acid.The migratory variation of Pallisentis sp. infecting Channa punctatus (Bloch 1793) was transported over a period of two age from June 2017- May 2019. The sampling of host fish was approved from local fish markets of various regions of the Hooghly district of West Benal. The predominance, mean intensity, and profusion of infection were studied and statistically confirmed. A total of 300 fishes were examined regardless of sex of host fish, not enough which 141 fishes were raise to be infected accompanying acanthocephalan parasites. Acanthocephalans display a two-host lifecycle including a variety of arthropods (crustaceans and insects) as their middle hosts and different vertebrates (chum, amphibians, reptiles, birds and animals) as their definitive hosts. The contamination level was higher before the monsoon, moderate all the while the monsoon, and lower following in position or time the monsoon. Medium-sized host chum are typically thickly affected. It was discovered that basic parameters, to a degree the eating habits of host chum and the availability of in-between hosts, such as arthropods, as well as abiotic determinants (temperature, relative humidness, rainfall, etc.), had an impact on the chance of Pallisentis sp. Life cycle of the parasite class and immune status of the host chum might be too responsible for such migratory variations.
Author(s) Details:
Ankita Dey,
Department
of Zoology for UG & PG Studies, Serampore College (Affiliated to the
University of Calcutta), Serampore-712 201, Hooghly, West Bengal, India.
Chiranjeeb
Dey,
Department
of Zoology for UG & PG Studies, Serampore College (Affiliated to the
University of Calcutta), Serampore-712 201, Hooghly, West Bengal, India.
Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/CERB-V9/article/view/11178
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