Abstract:
Parasites of bivalve molluscs are good indicators of pollution and play an important role
in regulating population dynamics by influencing their community structure. This work aims
to study the parasitism of Donax trunculus, an edible bivalve mollusc known in the Gulf of
Annaba. The composition of the parasitic fauna was determined from the examination of 360
host individuals collected from three sites in the Gulf, El Battah, a site far from any source of
pollution; Echatt, site subject to urban and agrarian pollution and Sidi Salem, site subject to
mainly industrial pollution during the four seasons of 2016. The collection of 8794 parasitic
individuals divided on different cloths (gonad, digestive gland, mantle), allowed us to reveal
the presence of two parasitic species belonging to two families different from digènes
trematodes Bacciger bacciger (Rudolphi, on 1819) (Fellodistomidae) and Postmonorchis
sp(Hopinks, on 1941) (Monorchidae). The stocks of parasitical indications in the three sites of
study show that species Postmonorchis sp records the most important parasitical load (65,55
%) in comparison with Bacciger bacciger (16,66 %). The distribution of parasitical indices at
the level of the three tissues of D. trunculus shows that it is the digestive gland, which records
the rate of infestation the most well brought up in comparison with other tissues, and then the
site of Echatt records the most important parasitical loads in comparison with other sites.
Statistical results showed a significant difference of the parasitical infra-communities owed
probably to spatio-temporal and biotic variations