Sealworms or codworms, larvae of ascaridoid nematodes belonging to the Pseudoterranova decipiens species complex, infect the flesh of numerous species of marine and euryhaline fish, and have proven a chronic and costly cosmetic problem for seafood processors. Moreover, the parasite may cause abdominal discomfort in humans when consumed in raw, undercooked or lightly marinated fish. In this review, the phylogeny, life cycle and distributions of sealworms are discussed along with biotic and abiotic factors which may influence distributions of these parasites in their intermediate and final hosts. Also considered here are efforts to control the problem through commercial fishing practices, fish processing technology, and the reduction of infection parameters in marine fish populations by biological means. Ironically, concern over sealworm problem has subsided in some fisheries in recent years, not as a result of falling infection parameters in fish stocks or innovations in processing technology, but as a consequence of declines in abundance and size of groundfish.
Larval sealworm (Pseudoterranova decipiens, (Krabbe 1878)) were transmitted sequentially through copepods and amphipods to 12 phylogenetically diverse fish species. Although P. decipiens in amphipods were 0.82–7.08 mm long, only those ≥1.41 mm were infective to fish. Sealworm transmitted at 15 °C migrated to the musculature within 6 h in mummichog (Fundulus heteroclitus) and 12 h in rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) but were confined to the bolus in an Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) stomach at 24 h. All sealworm in smelt, but only 12% of those in cod, occupied the musculature after 7 days. Death of 15 mummichog and a grubby (Myoxocephalus aenaeus) 10–20 days after exposure apparently resulted from damage to the brain, heart, aorta, liver, or spleen by feeding and migrating nematodes. Whereas 100% of the sealworm in grubby and 86–88% of those in mummichog and winter flounder (Pleuronectes americanus) were dead and encapsulated in host connective tissue after 56 days, all P. decipiens in smelt were viable and unencapsulated. With length increasing linearly at 0.421 mm day−1, sealworm larvae reached 27.29 (23.60–30.70) mm after 56 days in smelt at 15 °C. However, P. decipiens, which escaped the host tissue response in mummichog and flounder, were only 10.14 (6.00–21.80) and 12.42 (9.53–14.40) mm in length, respectively.
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