Lernaeocera branchialis

Lernaeocera branchialis, sometimes called cod worm, is a parasite of marine fish, found mainly in the North Atlantic. It is a marine copepod which starts life as a small pelagic crustacean larva. It is among the largest of copepods, ranging in size from 2 to 3 millimetres (332 to 18 inch) when it matures as a copepodid larva to more than 40 mm (1+12 in) as a sessile adult.

Lernaeocera branchialis
The gills of a whiting infested by two blood-sucking Lernaeocera branchialis
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Copepoda
Order: Siphonostomatoida
Family: Pennellidae
Genus: Lernaeocera
Species:
L. branchialis
Binomial name
Lernaeocera branchialis
Synonyms
  • Lernaea branchialis Linnaeus, 1767
  • Lernaea gobina O. F. Müller, 1776
  • Lernaea lumpi T. Scott, 1901
  • Lernaeocera lumpi (T. Scott, 1901)
  • Lernaeocera megacephala A. Scott, 1929
  • Lernaeocera obtusa Kabata, 1957
  • Lernaeocera wilsoni J. H. Schuurmans Stekhoven Jr., 1936

Lernaeocera branchialis is ectoparasitic, which means it is a parasite that lives primarily on the surface of its hosts. It has many life stages, some of which are motile and some of which are sessile. It goes through two parasitic stages, one where it parasitizes as a secondary host a flounder or lumpsucker, and another stage where it parasitizes as a primary host a cod or other fishes of the cod family (gadoids). It is a pathogen that negatively impacts the commercial fishing and mariculture of cod-like fish.

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