“…In Brazil, it has been registered infecting the eyeballs of Geophagus brasiliensis (NOVAES et al, 2006), Geophagus surinamensis (SANTOS et al, 2002), Cichla ocellaris (SANTOS et al, 2002), Cichla sp. (SANTOS et al, 2002), Cichla monoculus (MACHADO et al 2005;VITAL et al 2016), Satanoperca papaterra (MACHADO et al 2005, Hoplias malabaricus (SANTOS et al, 2002;CORRÊA et al, 2014), Hypostomus regani (YAMADA et al, 2008;ZICA et al, 2009), Schizodon borellii, Auchenipterus osteomystax, Serrasalmus maculatus (YAMADA et al, 2008), and Plagioscion squamosissimus (KOHN et al 1995;SANTOS et al, 2002;MACHADO et al, 2005;SANTOS et al, 2002;ALBUQUERQUE et al, 2017), all of which are fish from different ecosystems. Despite the wide distribution and the increasing number of cases of occurrence of these eye fluke infections in Brazilian fish, the possible impacts on wild fish species remain unknown or neglected.…”