Temporal variation in the prevalence of the crayfish plague pathogen,
North American crayfish species are natural hosts of the crayfish plague pathogen
Aphanomyces astaci. The spiny-cheek crayfish Orconectes
limosus, widespread in Central Europe, is the main reservoir of A.
astaci in Czech Republic. We tested if there are temporal changes in the
prevalence of infected individuals (i.e., the proportion of individuals
in which the pathogen is detected) in spiny-cheek crayfish populations. Crayfish from
three populations shown previously to be infected to different extents (high, intermediate
and low), were repeatedly sampled in different years (2004–2010) and seasons. The presence
of A. astaci in the soft abdominal crayfish cuticle was tested by
specific amplification of the pathogen DNA. There was no substantial temporal variation in
pathogen prevalence in the highly and very lowly infected populations. However, a
significant long-term as well as seasonal decrease was found in the intermediately
infected population. This decline could be related to a decrease in population density
over the studied years, and to crayfish seasonal moulting, respectively. A reliable
estimate of pathogen prevalence in American crayfish populations thus requires repeated
monitoring over years, preferably during the same season before the main period of
crayfish moulting.
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