AquaNISInformation system on aquatic non-indigenous and cryptogenic species |
Species | Herrmannella duggani | |
Date of the first record (?) | 1982 References (not structured): Holmes JMC, Minchin D (1991) A new species of Herrmannella (Copepoda, Poecilostomatoida, Sabelliphilidae) associated with the oyster Ostrea edulis L. Crustaceana, 60(3): 258-269. Comments: First recovered from the native oyster Ostrea edulis in July 1982 from Ballinakill Bay and subsequently in 1988 from Clew Bay on the west coast of Ireland. The species will have almost certainly have been present before this date as the impacts on oysters had been noticed some years before. |
Recipient region (?) | Country: Ireland LME: 24. Celtic-Biscay Shelf LME sub-region: Celtic seas References (not structured): Holmes JMC, Minchin D (1991) A new species of Herrmannella (Copepoda, Poecilostomatoida, Sabelliphilidae) associated with the oyster Ostrea edulis L. Crustaceana, 60(3): 258-269. Comments: The species was recorded from Clew and Donegal bays |
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Source region (?) | Unknown Comments: It is not known where the species may have come from. |
Pathway / Vector (?) | Unknown References (not structured): Holmes JMC, Minchin D (1991) A new species of Herrmannella (Copepoda, Poecilostomatoida, Sabelliphilidae) associated with the oyster Ostrea edulis L. Crustaceana, 60(3): 258-269. Comments: It is possible that it might have been introduced with oysters from France at an earlier time, France being the only other country this species is presently known from. |
Habitat type (?) | Aquaculture sites Sheltered coastal area References (not structured): Holmes JMC, Minchin D (1991) A new species of Herrmannella (Copepoda, Poecilostomatoida, Sabelliphilidae) associated with the oyster Ostrea edulis L. Crustaceana, 60(3): 258-269. Comments: Associated with the mantle cavity of the native oyster being found on gills. It is thought to be associated with the wavy gill margin of the gill outline. In some oysters the gills were almost entirely eroded away and oysters were dying from this condition in Kilkeiran Bay in the early 1980s. |
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Wave exposure (?) | Sheltered References (not structured): Holmes JMC, Minchin D (1991) A new species of Herrmannella (Copepoda, Poecilostomatoida, Sabelliphilidae) associated with the oyster Ostrea edulis L. Crustaceana, 60(3): 258-269. Comments: The oysters were obtained from shallow water sheltered localities. |
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Salinity range (?) | Not entered | |
Temperature range (?) | Not entered |
Zonation / Substratum (?) | Benthic and Pelagic: Littoral (Pelagic) Sublittoral within photic zone Substratum: Biogenic (living or nonliving) Comments: The full life cycle of this species remains unknown it has a plankton stage but the naupliar stages have not been described. It was absent from many of the oysters that were collected. Oysters held off the bottom avoided the gill damage suggesting the copepod is benthic/epibenthic. |
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Reproductive duration (?) | Unknown Comments: No studies on reproduction were undertaken although ovigerous females were found during July 1982. | |
Reproductive seasonality (?) | Not entered | |
Migration pattern (?) | Not entered |
Population status (?) | Unknown (Low level of certainty) Comments: Current status unknown no recent accounts of individuals or of the symptoms caused in oysters. Its rapid expansion, and a several sites about the coast including symptoms in oysters from Clew Bay, Ballinakill Bay, Cork Harbour. A similar wavy gill conditions was found in Crassostrea gigas in the North Channel of Cork Harbour in the early 2000s which might have been due to the same copepod. |
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Species status (?) | Cryptogenic References (not structured): Bocquet, C. Stock,H (1959) Copepodes parasites d'invertebres des cotes de France. X. Sur les especes de Paranthessius (Cyclopoida, Lichomolgidae) du groupe des Herrmannella, associees ) des Pelecypodes. Proc. K. Nederlandse Akad. Wet. (C) 62:238-249. Comments: It is unclear whether this species is a native that has had an outbreak of it it is introduced. It might be part of the northern European coastal fauna or could have been introduced within oysters with movements of oysters earlier in the 1900s. |
Created by | Dan Minchin |
Last update by | Dan Minchin, 2013-10-19 |