“…Several papers have been written in connection with the Alvarado Lagoon and the various biological components that inhabit it; regarding fish, we can mention the papers of Reséndez (1973); Flores and Méndez, (1982); Franco, Peraza and Chávez, (1992); Franco, Chávez, Peláez and Bedia (1996); Barrera, Franco, Zamudio and Martínez (2002); Chávez, Peterson, Brown, Morales and Franco (2005); Peláez, Franco, Matamoros, Chávez, and Brown-Peterson (2005); Salgado, Aguilar, Cabañas, Soto & Mendoza (2005); Zarza, Berruecos-Villalobos, Vásquez- Peláez and Álvarez-Torre (2006); Abarca-Arenas, Franco-López, Peterson, Brown-Peterson and Valero-Pacheco (2007);Carbajal et al, (2009); Abarca, Cruz, Franco, González and Silva (2012); Franco et al, (2014); Franco et al, (2017), who address several aspects of this taxon, including early development stages, life and reproductive cycles, as well as food webs and community interactions. D. maculatus is mentioned in some of these papers, both as a community element or as part of food webs; however, only the paper of Montoya, Osorio, Chavez and Franco (2004), addresses issues on the helminth parasitism that usually affects this species and which is acknowledged as a vector for the transmission of the parasite to other species of the lagoon system.…”