Invasion History
First Non-native Panama (Pacific) Tidal Record: 1974Panama Invasion History:
Invasion History in Panama:
This leech has also been collected from the Miraflores Locks and Panama Bay in 1974 (US National Museum of Natural History 2017). The likeliest vector is introduction of North American gamefish, but ballast water transport is also possible.
Invasion history elsewhere in the world:
In 2016, two specimens of Myzobdella lugubris were collected on a European Pond Turtle ((Emys orbicularis hellenica) in a brackish canal in the Riserva Naturale dello Stato Oasi WWF 'LeCesine' in Apulia, Italy, near the mouth of Adriatic Sea. This is the first record of this leech in the Eastern Hemisphere, and the first record on a reptile (Liuzzo et al. 2018).
Description
Myzobdella lugubris is a leech of fresh waters, and brackish-to-marine coastal waters. It has an elongate, slightly flattened club-like body. It has a smooth, translucent skin, lacking papillae, ocelli, or gills. The body consists of a head, an anterior region (tracheolosome, 6 segments) and a posterior urosome (12 segments), especially in adult or engorged individuals. The oral sucker is small, slightly wider than neck region and about three-fifths as wide as their terminal caudal sucker. It has one pair of eyespots, on the oral sucker. It reaches a length of 26 mm. It is an ectoparasite on many fishes and crustaceans (Sawyer et al.1975; Williams 2007).
Taxonomy
Taxonomic Tree
Kingdom: | Animalia | |
Phylum: | Annelida | |
Class: | Clitellata | |
Subclass: | Hirudinea | |
Infraclass: | Euhirudinea | |
Order: | Rhynchobdellida | |
Family: | Piscicolidae | |
SubFamily: | Platybdellinae | |
Genus: | Myzobdella | |
Species: | lugubris |
Synonyms
Illinobdella alba (Meyer, 1940)
Illinobdella elongata (Meyer, 1940)
Illinobdella moorei (Meyer, 1940)
Illinobdella richardsoni (Meyer, 1940)
Myzobdella funduli (Verrill, 1872)
Piscicola punctata (Moore, 1912)
Potentially Misidentified Species
Myzobdella lubrica was initially reported from Lionfish (Pterois sp. collected off North Carolina (Ruiz-Carus et al. 2006). However, a re-examination of the voucher specimens and later collections found that the leeches on lionfishes were Trachobdella lubrica, a frequent parasite of scorpeanid fishes (Bullard et al. 2011).
Ecology
General:
Myzobdella lugubris tolerates a wide range of temperature and salinity, at least 3–28 °C, and 0 to 26 PSU (Sawyer et al. 1975), and possibly higher. This leech is known to parasitize mysids (Neomysis americana, Blue Crabs (Callinectes sapidus), shrimps (Palaemonetes spp.; Penaeus spp.), more than 40 species of freshwater and marine fishes, and one occurrence on a turtle (Sawyer et al. 1975; Font 2003; Harris and Vogelbine 2006; Liuzzo et al. 2018). Usually only one or two leeches attach to a Palaemonetes, ~5 to Blue Crabs, and 9.5 from a group of White Catfish (Ameiurus catus), although one White Catfish had 500 leeches (Sawyer et al. 1975). In Back Bay, Virginia, Largemouth Bass (Micropterus salmoides) had 1–15 leeches mostly in the oral region. However, infested fish did not differ from un-parasitzed fishes in plasma glucose, cortisol, or general condition (Pomposini et al. 2018).
Food:
Blood of fishes and decapod crustaceans
Trophic Status:
Parasite
ParasHabitats
General Habitat | Fresh (nontidal) Marsh | None |
General Habitat | Grass Bed | None |
General Habitat | Coarse Woody Debris | None |
General Habitat | Swamp | None |
General Habitat | Nontidal Freshwater | None |
General Habitat | Tidal Fresh Marsh | None |
General Habitat | Salt-brackish marsh | None |
Salinity Range | Limnetic | 0-0.5 PSU |
Salinity Range | Oligohaline | 0.5-5 PSU |
Salinity Range | Mesohaline | 5-18 PSU |
Tidal Range | Subtidal | None |
Vertical Habitat | Epibenthic | None |
Vertical Habitat | Nektonic | None |
Life History
Myzobdella lugubris is a leech known from freshwater, brackish, and marine habitats, and a wide variety of freshwater, estuarine, and marine fish hosts, from a number of estuarine decapod crustacean hosts, and in one case, a turtle (Sawyer et al. 1975; Font 2003; Liuzzo et al. 2018). Leeches are hermaphroditic, and eggs are laid in cocoons, often on the shells of crabs (e.g., Callinectes sapidus) or shrimps (e.g., Palaemonetes). Coccoons hatch in about 11 days at 25 °C (Sawyer et al. 1975), or at 28–48 days at 17–22 °C. Cocoons contain a single egg (Saglam et al. 2018). Given its native and introduced ranges M. lugubris seems to be very flexible in its hosts.
Tolerances and Life History Parameters
Minimum Temperature (ºC) | 2.8 | Field (Sawyer et al. 1975) |
Maximum Temperature (ºC) | 28 | Field (Sawyer et al. 1975) |
Minimum Salinity (‰) | 0 | Field (Sawyer et al. 2019) |
Maximum Salinity (‰) | 26 | Field. In experiments, 15 PSU with direct transfer (Sawyer et al. 2019). Records in full seawater suggest genetic diversity or a species complex. |
Broad Temperature Range | None | Cold Temperate-Tropical |
Broad Salinity Range | None | Nontidal Limnetic-Mesohaline |
General Impacts
Leeches are ectoparasites, sucking blood and body fluids from their hosts. Although Myzobdella lugubris is aesthically repulsive to fishermen, there is little evidence of negative impacts on crustacean or fish populations (Daniels and Sawyer 1975; Sawyer et al. 1975; Pomposini et al. 2019).
Regional Distribution Map
Bioregion | Region Name | Year | Invasion Status | Population Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
PAN_PAC | Panama Pacific Coast | 1974 | Non-native | Established |
Occurrence Map
OCC_ID | Author | Year | Date | Locality | Status | Latitude | Longitude |
---|
References
Amin, Omar M.; Minckley, Wendell L. (1996) Parasites of some fish introduced into an Arizona reservoir, with notes on introductions., Journal of the Helminthological Society of Washington 63(2): 193-200Bullard, S. A.; Barse, A. M.; Curran, S. S.; Morris, J. A., Jr. (2011) First record of a digenean from invasive lionfish, Pterois cf. volitans, (Scorpaeniformes: Scorpaenidae) in the northwestern Atlantic Ocean, Journal of Parasitology 97(5): 833-837
Daniels, Bruce A.; Sawyer, Roy T. (1975) The biology of the leech Myzobdella lugubris infesting blue crabs and catfish., Biological Bulletin 148: 193-198
Font, William F. (2003) The global spread of parasites: what do Hawaiian streams tell us?, BioScience 53(11): 1061-1067
Hensley, Gary H., Nahhas, F.M. (1975) Parasites of fishes from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, California., California Fish and Game 61(4): 201-208
Liuzzo, M.; Alfonso, G.; Beli, E.; Arculeo, M.; Marrone, F. (2018) First record of the alien leech Myzobdella lugubris Leidy, 1851 (Hirudinea, Piscicolidae) in the Palearctic, Limnetica 37(2): 311-318
DOI: 10.23818/limn.37.25
Noga, Edward J.; BuIIis,’Robert A.; Miller, Grover C. (1990) Epidemic Oral Ulceration in Largemouth Bass (Micropterus salmoides) Associated with the Leech Myzobdella lugubris, Journal of Wildlife Diseases 26(1): 132-154
DOI: 10.7589/0090-3558-26.1.132
Ruiz-Carus, Ramon; Matheson, Richard E.; Roberts, Daniel E.; Whitfield, Paula E. (2006) The western Pacific red lionfish, Pterois volitans (Scorpaenidae), in Florida: evidence for reproduction and parasitism in the first exotic marine fish established in state waters., Biological Conservation 128: 384-390
Saglam, Naim; Saunders, Ralph; Lang, Shirley A.' Shain, Daniel H. (2018) Phylogeny and cocoon production in the parasitic leech Myzobdella lugubris Leidy, 1851 (Hirudinidae, Piscicolidae), Acta Parasitologica 63(1): 15-26
DOI: 10.1515/ap-2018-0002
Sawyer, Roy T.; Lawler, Adirian L.; Overstreet, robin M. (1975) Marine leeches of the eastern United States and the Gulf of Mexico with a key to the species., Journal of Natural History 9: 633-667
Troxel, Daniel J. (2010) Parasites of Largemouth Bass (Micropterus salmoides) in northern California , Humboldt State University, Arcata, California. Pp. <missing location>
U.S. National Museum of Natural History 2002-2021 Invertebrate Zoology Collections Database. http://collections.nmnh.si.edu/search/iz/
Williams, Julianne I. (2007) Monograph of the North American freshwater fish leeches (Oligochaeta: Hirudinida ; Piscicolidae) and molecular phylogeny of the family Piscicolidae, College of William and Mary - Virginia Institute of Marine Science, Gloucester Point, Virginia. Pp. <missing location>