Agreed, that is why I posted the link along with the picture. This is not a cookie cutter family of parasite. It is quite diverse with many species. Just like all cichlids look different due to evolutionary adaptations so do the different species of gyrodactylus look different.There are at least 400 different species of Gyrodactylus skin flukes found world wide, and I would imagine the particular species found in Turkey may have a slightly different appearance than the typical species posted by photographers in the US.
To me the photos you posted are as Tom said, skin flukes.
You may have had only 1 larval individual or a few eggs on a fish months ago, and it it has taken until this point to notice that they have been reproducing, and are at an epidemic population.