Molluscan intestinal parasites of the genus Mytilicola, specifically M. intestinalis, were initially introduced into bivalves in the North Sea in the 1930s. It was presumably introduced from the Mediterranean with ship-fouling mussels, then attained epidemic proportions in Mytilus edulis in the 1950s and is now widely established in the North Sea region. Mytilicola orientalis was co-introduced with Pacific oysters to France in the 1970s and in the southern North Sea in the early 1990s. Its main host Crassostrea gigas has massively invaded the Wadden Sea with a concomitant decline in mussels. To explore whether introduced mytilicolid parasites could play a role in the shifting dominance from native mussels to invasive oysters, we analysed 39...
<div><p>Despite their frequent occurrence and strong impacts on native biota, biological invasions c...
Parasites are ubiquitous in nature and the strong natural selection pressures they impose on their h...
Biological invasions can have manifold effects on native biota, including impacts on species interac...
Molluscan intestinal parasites of the genus Mytilicola, specifically M. intestinalis, were initially...
Invasive species can cause indirect effects on native biota by modifying parasite-host interactions ...
Invasive species can cause indirect effects on native biota by modifying parasite-host interactions ...
The aim of this study was to determine the macro-parasitic infestation level of oysters from the sou...
The parasitic copepod Mytilicola orientalis infesting mussels and oysters was so far only described...
<p>Invasive species can indirectly affect native species by modifying parasite–host dynamics and dis...
Critical appraisal of the literature data on Mytilicola intestinalis, combined with personal experie...
The occurrence of Mytilicola intestinalis in populations of mussels in south-west England is recorde...
Despite their frequent occurrence and strong impacts on native biota, biological invasions can long ...
International audienceInvasive species, and especially invasive parasites, represent excellent model...
Six species of Copepoda Poecilostomatoida of the families Myicolidae, Sabelliphilidae, Lichomolgidae...
<div><p>Despite their frequent occurrence and strong impacts on native biota, biological invasions c...
Parasites are ubiquitous in nature and the strong natural selection pressures they impose on their h...
Biological invasions can have manifold effects on native biota, including impacts on species interac...
Molluscan intestinal parasites of the genus Mytilicola, specifically M. intestinalis, were initially...
Invasive species can cause indirect effects on native biota by modifying parasite-host interactions ...
Invasive species can cause indirect effects on native biota by modifying parasite-host interactions ...
The aim of this study was to determine the macro-parasitic infestation level of oysters from the sou...
The parasitic copepod Mytilicola orientalis infesting mussels and oysters was so far only described...
<p>Invasive species can indirectly affect native species by modifying parasite–host dynamics and dis...
Critical appraisal of the literature data on Mytilicola intestinalis, combined with personal experie...
The occurrence of Mytilicola intestinalis in populations of mussels in south-west England is recorde...
Despite their frequent occurrence and strong impacts on native biota, biological invasions can long ...
International audienceInvasive species, and especially invasive parasites, represent excellent model...
Six species of Copepoda Poecilostomatoida of the families Myicolidae, Sabelliphilidae, Lichomolgidae...
<div><p>Despite their frequent occurrence and strong impacts on native biota, biological invasions c...
Parasites are ubiquitous in nature and the strong natural selection pressures they impose on their h...
Biological invasions can have manifold effects on native biota, including impacts on species interac...