Cryptocotyle
Cryptocotyle is a genus of trematodes from the family Heterophyidae. The definitive hosts of the parasites are fish-eating birds and mammals. The metacercariae are visible in the skin of infected fish as "black spots".[1]
| Cryptocotyle | |
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| The metacercariae, encysted in the fins of the round goby | |
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| Genus: | Cryptocotyle Lühe, 1899  | 
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Species
    
- Cryptocotyle americana Ciurea, 1924
 - Cryptocotyle badamshini (Kurochkin, 1959)
 - Cryptocotyle concava (Creplin, 1825)
 - Cryptocotyle cryptocotyloides (Issaitschikow, 1923)
 - Cryptocotyle delamurei (Jurachno, 1987)
 - Cryptocotyle jejuna (Nicoll, 1907)
 - Cryptocotyle lingua (Creplin, 1825)
 - Cryptocotyle macrorhinis (MacCallum, 1916)
 
References
    
-  Duflot, Maureen; Cresson, Pierre; Julien, Maéva; Chartier, Léa; Bourgau, Odile; Palomba, Marialetizia; Mattiucci, Simonetta; Midelet, Graziella; Gay, Mélanie (2023). "Black spot diseases in seven commercial fish species from the English Channel and the North Sea: infestation levels, identification and population genetics of Cryptocotyle spp". Parasite. 30: 28. doi:10.1051/parasite/2023028. PMC 10327545. 

 
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