Three species of poeciliids (Gambusia holbrooki, Xiphophorus helleri and X. maculatus) and 15 species of ecologically similar
native freshwater fishes (mainly eleotrids, ambassids, melanotaeniids and retropinnids) were examined for parasite richness
to investigate parasite flux, qualitative differences, quantitative differences and the structuring factors in parasite communities
in the 2 fish types in Queensland, Australia. Theory suggests that poeciliids would harbour depauperate parasite
communities. Results supported this hypothesis; poeciliids harboured more species-poor parasite infracommunities and
regional faunas than natives (P < 0·0001), despite greater sampling effort for the former. Cluster analysis of
presence/absence data for poeciliids and the 6 most-sampled native fishes revealed that parasite communities of the 2 fish groups
are qualitatively distinct; the proportion of parasite species with complex life-cycles was lower in poeciliids than in native
species, and Myxosporea, Microspora, Coccidia and parasitic Crustacea were all absent from poeciliids. Limited exchange
of parasite species has occurred between natives and poeciliids. Logistic ordinal regression analysis revealed that fish
origin (exotic or native), environmental disturbance and host sex were all significant determinants of parasite community
richness (P < 0·05). Theoretical modelling suggests that poeciliids are at a competitive advantage over native fishes because
of their lack of parasites.