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Dive into the research topics where Manuela Krakau is active.

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Featured researches published by Manuela Krakau.


Biological Invasions | 2006

Native Parasites Adopt Introduced Bivalves of the North Sea

Manuela Krakau; David W. Thieltges; Karsten Reise

Introduced species may have a competitive advantage over native species due to a lack of predators or pathogens. In the North Sea region, it has been assumed that no metazoan parasites are to be found in marine introduced species. In an attempt to test this assumption, we found native parasites in the introduced bivalves Crassostrea gigas and Ensis americanus with a prevalence of 35% and 80%, respectively, dominated by the trematode Renicola roscovita. When comparing these introduced species with native bivalves from the same localities, Mytilus edulis and Cerastoderma edule, trematode intensity was always lower in the introduced species. These findings have three major implications: (1) introduced bivalves are not free of detrimental parasites which raises the question whether introduced species have an advantage over native species after invasion, (2) introduced bivalves may divert parasite burdens providing a relief for native species and (3) they may affect parasite populations by influencing the fate of infectious stages, ending either in dead end hosts, not being consumed by potential final hosts or by adding new hosts. Future studies should consider these implications to arrive at a better understanding of the interplay between native parasites and introduced hosts.


Helgoland Marine Research | 2006

Macroparasite community in molluscs of a tidal basin in the Wadden Sea

David W. Thieltges; Manuela Krakau; Henrike Andresen; Silke Fottner; Karsten Reise

We provide a quantitative inventory of macroparasites in intertidal molluscs from a tidal basin in the Wadden Sea (eastern North Sea). Gastropods and bivalves contained a species rich macroparasite community consisting of trematodes (26 species), turbellarians (1), nematodes (1), copepods (2) and polychaetes (1) in 3,800 host individuals from 10 host species. Highest parasite burdens were observed in the gastropods Hydrobia ulvae and Littorina littorea and in the bivalves Cerastoderma edule and Mytilus edulis. In contrast, only one parasite species and no trematodes were found in Crepidula fornicata. The parasite community in the molluscs was similar to other Western European localities but some parasite species showed obvious differences, related to the large-scale distribution of intermediate and final hosts. Parasitism seems to be a common phenomenon in molluscs of the Wadden Sea and hence the detrimental effects observed in experiments can be expected to frequently happen in the field.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2009

Digenean trematode species in the cockle Cerastoderma edule: identification key and distribution along the north-eastern Atlantic shoreline.

Xavier de Montaudouin; David W. Thieltges; Mériame Gam; Manuela Krakau; Suzana Pina; Hocein Bazairi; Laurent Dabouineau; Fernanda Russell-Pinto; K. Thomas Jensen

We describe the digenean fauna of one of the dominant intertidal hosts, the common cockle Cerastoderma edule , in terms of biomass, off north-eastern Atlantic shores. Using published and unpublished literature we have prepared an identification key and provide an up-date of the large-scale distributional patterns of digenean species of the common cockle. At least sixteen digenean species, belonging to seven families, use cockles as intermediate host. Among these species two utilize cockles as first intermediate host only, whereas two species utilize cockles as both first and second intermediate host. The remaining eleven species have cockles as their second intermediate host. Water birds and fish are the definitive hosts to twelve and four species, respectively. Cockles are infected with digeneans along the latitudinal gradient from southern Morocco to the western region of the Barents Sea often with high infection levels. Whereas some of these digenean species occur along most of the latitudinal gradient others show a more restricted northern or southern distribution mostly caused by an underlying latitudinal gradient of host species. Knowledge of digenean species and their large-scale distribution pattern may serve as a baseline for future studies dealing with the effects of climate change on parasite–host systems. For such studies the cockle and its digenean community could be an ideal model system.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2010

An efficient method to find potentially universal population genetic markers, applied to metazoans

Anne Chenuil; Thierry B. Hoareau; Emilie Egea; Gwilherm Penant; Caroline Rocher; Didier Aurelle; Kenza Mokhtar-Jamaï; John D. D. Bishop; Emilie Boissin; Angie Díaz; Manuela Krakau; Pieternella C Luttikhuizen; Francesco Paolo Patti; Nicolas Blavet; Sylvain Mousset

BackgroundDespite the impressive growth of sequence databases, the limited availability of nuclear markers that are sufficiently polymorphic for population genetics and phylogeography and applicable across various phyla restricts many potential studies, particularly in non-model organisms. Numerous introns have invariant positions among kingdoms, providing a potential source for such markers. Unfortunately, most of the few known EPIC (Exon Primed Intron Crossing) loci are restricted to vertebrates or belong to multigenic families.ResultsIn order to develop markers with broad applicability, we designed a bioinformatic approach aimed at avoiding multigenic families while identifying intron positions conserved across metazoan phyla. We developed a program facilitating the identification of EPIC loci which allowed slight variation in intron position. From the Homolens databases we selected 29 gene families which contained 52 promising introns for which we designed 93 primer pairs. PCR tests were performed on several ascidians, echinoderms, bivalves and cnidarians. On average, 24 different introns per genus were amplified in bilaterians. Remarkably, five of the introns successfully amplified in all of the metazoan genera tested (a dozen genera, including cnidarians). The influence of several factors on amplification success was investigated. Success rate was not related to the phylogenetic relatedness of a taxon to the groups that most influenced primer design, showing that these EPIC markers are extremely conserved in animals.ConclusionsOur new method now makes it possible to (i) rapidly isolate a set of EPIC markers for any phylum, even outside the animal kingdom, and thus, (ii) compare genetic diversity at potentially homologous polymorphic loci between divergent taxa.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2010

Salinity gradient shapes distance decay of similarity among parasite communities in three marine fishes

David W. Thieltges; Tobias Dolch; Manuela Krakau; Robert Poulin

Published data were used to compare the distance decay of similarity in parasite communities of three marine fish hosts: Atlantic cod Gadus morhua, the dab Limanda limanda and the flounder Platichthys flesus in two adjacent areas that differ with respect to the strength of a salinity gradient. In the Baltic Sea, which exhibits a strong salinity gradient from its connection with the North Sea in the west to its head in the north-east, parasite communities in all three fish hosts showed a significant decline of similarity with increasing distance. In contrast, among host populations in the North Sea, which is a fully marine environment, there was no such decline or only a weak relationship. The results suggest that environmental gradients like salinity can be strong driving forces behind patterns of distance decay in parasite communities of fishes.


Oecologia | 2009

Distance decay of similarity among parasite communities of three marine invertebrate hosts.

David W. Thieltges; MacNeill A. D. Ferguson; C. S. Jones; Manuela Krakau; Xavier de Montaudouin; Leslie R. Noble; Karsten Reise; Robert Poulin


Marine Biology | 2012

The cockle Cerastoderma edule at Northeast Atlantic shores: genetic signatures of glacial refugia

Manuela Krakau; Sabine Jacobsen; K. T. Jensen; Karsten Reise


Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science | 2012

Comparative phylogeography of two sister (congeneric) species of cardiid bivalve: Strong influence of habitat, life history and post-glacial history

Katarzyna Tarnowska; Manuela Krakau; Sabine Jacobsen; Maciej Wołowicz; Jean-Pierre Féral; Anne Chenuil


Helgoland Marine Research | 2008

Parasites in the northern Wadden Sea: a conservative ecosystem component over 4 decades

David W. Thieltges; Birgit Hussel; Judith Hermann; K. Thomas Jensen; Manuela Krakau; Horst Taraschewski; Karsten Reise


EPIC321. Jahrestagung der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Parasitologie,17-20 March, Würzburg, Germany. | 2004

Parasites in native and introduced molluscs of the Wadden Sea

Manuela Krakau; David W. Thieltges

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Karsten Reise

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Sabine Jacobsen

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Birgit Hussel

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Horst Taraschewski

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Anne Chenuil

Aix-Marseille University

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