individual fish belonging to 23 species were collected in 23 localities along the Nazas River drainage, with sample sizes per species varying from 2 to 145 specimens ( Figure 1; Table 1). Fish were collected under the Cartilla Nacional de Colector Científico de Flora y Fauna Silvestre (FAUT-0057 issued to G.P.P.L.). Fish were collected with seine nets and electrofishing, and were kept alive and studied for helminths no more that 4 hours after capture. All internal organs were analyzed separately in Petri dishes with 0.65 % saline under the stereoscope. Gills from each host were also obtained and placed in tap water to search for monogeneans. Monogeneans were fixed in glycerin ammonium-picrate (GAP) in order to study their sclerotized structures. After the morphological evaluation, specimens fixed with GAP were remounted in Canada balsam following Ergens (1969); some specimens were fixed in hot formaline 4 %, stained with Gomori's trichrome and mounted in Canada balsam to study their internal organs. Endoparasites were removed to a Petri dish with saline 0.65 %, prior to fixation. Digeneans and cestodes were fixed with hot (steaming) 4 % formalin. Acanthocephalans were maintained at 4 °C for 12 hours in distilled water, and then fixed in 70 % ethanol. Nematodes were fixed with hot (steaming) 4 % formalin or 70 % ethanol. All helminths were processed following standard procedures. Identification was made using specialized literature, and representative specimens of all helminth species were deposited at the Colección Nacional de Helmintos, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), Mexico City (CNHE).
Results and DiscussionIn total, 41 helminth species were found, representing 26 genera and 17 families. Of the 41 species we record herein, 19 were monogeneas, 10 digeneans, seven Abstract: This paper represents the first study of the helminth parasites of freshwater fishes from the Nazas River basin in northern Mexico. Between July 2005 and December 2008, 906 individual fish were collected and examined for helminth parasites in 23 localities along the river basin. Twenty-three species of fish were examined as a part of this inventory work. In total, 41 helminth species were identified: 19 monogeneans, 10 digeneans, seven cestodes, one acanthocephalan, and four nematodes. The biogeographical implications of our findings are briefly discussed.