“…Infection intensities measured in natural populations (Audenaert et al, ; Gérard et al, ; Heitlinger et al, ; Knopf, ; Münderle et al, ) and in experimental individuals several weeks after an infection was established (Knopf & Lucius, ; Knopf & Mahnke, ) indicate greater susceptibility by the novel host, the European eel. The population of the European eel has undergone catastrophic declines (Bornarel et al, ; Diekmann et al, ; ICES, ), and A. crassus infections have been implicated (Drouineau et al, ; Sures & Knopf, ). We found similar infection intensities in the two eel species 23 days after experimental infection, at which time larval parasites had finished migrating to the swim bladder, and we did not find any dead larvae.…”