Leidenberger Sonja, Harding Karin, Härkönen Tero
Swedish Museum of Natural History, Box 50007, 10405 Stockholm, Sweden.
Dis Aquat Organ. 2007 Oct 15;77(3):235-53. doi: 10.3354/dao01823.
Adaptation of pinnipeds to the marine habitat imposed parallel evolutions in their parasites. Ancestral pinnipeds must have harboured sucking lice, which were ancestors of the seal louse Echinophthirius horridus. The seal louse is one of the few insects that successfully adjusted to the marine environment. Adaptations such as keeping an air reservoir and the ability to hold on to and move on the host were necessary, as well as an adjustment of their life cycle to fit the diving habits of their host. E. horridus are confined to the Northern Hemisphere and have been reported from 9 species of northern phocids belonging to 4 genera, including land-locked seal species. The transmission from seal to seal is only possible when animals are hauled-out on land or ice. Lice are rarely found on healthy adult seals, but frequently on weak and young animals. The seal louse is suggested to play an important role as an intermediate host transmitting the heartworm Acanthocheilonema spirocauda among seals. However, the evidence is restricted to a single study where the first 3 larval stages of the heartworm were shown to develop in the louse. The fourth-stage larvae develop in the blood system of seals and eventually transform into the adult stage that matures in the heart. Since all other studies failed to confirm the presence of heartworm larvae in seal lice, other unknown intermediate hosts could be involved in the transmission of the heartworm. Transplacental transmission of microfilariae in seals has been suggested as an additional possibility, but is not likely to be important since the occurrence of heartworms in adult seals is very rare compared with juveniles. Furthermore, there are no findings of the first 3 larval stages in seals. This review shows that the heartworm infects nearly the same species of seals as the seal louse, except for the grey seal Halichoerus grypus, where the heartworm is absent. Prevalence and intensity of infection differ among regions in the Northern Hemisphere. As for seal lice, heartworms mainly infect immature seals, and after infection the prevalence seems to decrease with increasing age of the host.
鳍足类动物对海洋栖息地的适应导致其寄生虫也发生了平行进化。原始鳍足类动物肯定寄生过吸血虱,而吸血虱是海豹虱棘虱(Echinophthirius horridus)的祖先。海豹虱是少数成功适应海洋环境的昆虫之一。诸如保留空气储存器、能够附着在宿主身上并在宿主身上移动的适应能力是必要的,同时还需要调整其生命周期以适应宿主的潜水习性。棘虱局限于北半球,已在属于4个属的9种北方海豹科动物中被发现,包括内陆海豹物种。只有当动物在陆地或冰面上上岸时,虱子才有可能在海豹之间传播。健康的成年海豹身上很少发现虱子,但在体弱和年幼的动物身上则很常见。有人认为海豹虱作为中间宿主在海豹之间传播犬恶丝虫(Acanthocheilonema spirocauda)起着重要作用。然而,证据仅限于一项单一研究,该研究表明犬恶丝虫的前三个幼虫阶段在虱子体内发育。第四阶段幼虫在海豹的血液系统中发育,最终转变为成虫阶段并在心脏中成熟。由于所有其他研究都未能证实海豹虱体内存在犬恶丝虫幼虫,因此可能有其他未知的中间宿主参与了犬恶丝虫的传播。有人提出海豹体内微丝蚴的胎盘传播是另一种可能性,但由于成年海豹中犬恶丝虫的发生率与幼年海豹相比非常低,所以这种传播方式可能并不重要。此外,在海豹体内没有发现前三个幼虫阶段。这篇综述表明,除了没有犬恶丝虫的灰海豹(Halichoerus grypus)外,犬恶丝虫感染的海豹物种与海豹虱感染的物种几乎相同。北半球不同地区的感染率和感染强度有所不同。至于海豹虱,犬恶丝虫主要感染未成熟的海豹,感染后患病率似乎随着宿主年龄的增加而降低。