242 results on '"Ceratomyxa"'
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2. Description of two new species of Ceratomyxa Thélohan, 1892 (Cnidaria: Myxosporea) infecting the gallbladder of Epinephelinae fishes from Tunisian waters using morphological and molecular data.
- Author
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Bouderbala, Khouloud, Rangel, Luis F., Santos, Maria J., and Bahri, Sihem
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GALLBLADDER , *WATER use , *SPECIES , *CNIDARIA , *OCTOCORALLIA , *TUNISIANS , *RECOMBINANT DNA - Abstract
Ceratomyxamarginati n. sp. and C.aenei n. sp. are two new coelozoic myxosporean species infecting the gallbladder of the dusky grouper (Epinephelusmarginatus) and the white grouper (Epinephelusaeneus), respectively. These two ceratomyxids were described using morphological characteristics and molecular analysis of the SSU rDNA. Ceratomyxamarginati n. sp. exhibits disporic plasmodia measuring 12–14 µm long and 11–12 µm wide and mature myxospores which are slightly crescent-shaped, measuring 6.0 ± 0.3 (5.6–6.8) µm in length and 12.9 ± 0.9 (11.5–14.0) μm in thickness. Plasmodia of C.aenei n. sp. were disporic and ellipsoidal and measured 28–32 μm in length and 19–22 μm in width. Mature myxospores of C.aenei n. sp. were elongated with unequal shell valves and measured 7.4 ± 0.6 (6.9–9.0) μm in length and 26.9 ± 2.4 (23.2–30.0) μm in thickness. Based on the SSU rDNA sequences, Ceratomyxamarginati n. sp. and C.aenei n. sp. are distinct from all other Ceratomyxa sequences available in GenBank. Phylogenetic analysis reveals that the two new species branched together within a clade with other Ceratomyxa species from different host families and different geographical localities with maximum support (100%). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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3. How to build single‐celled cnidarians with worm‐like motility: Lessons from Myxozoa.
- Author
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Adriano, Edson A., Zatti, Suellen A., and Okamura, Beth
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MYXOZOA , *GALLBLADDER , *MARINE transgression , *MICROSCOPY , *VIDEO microscopy , *CNIDARIA - Abstract
Metazoans with worm‐like morphologies across diverse and disparate groups typically demonstrate motility generated by hydrostatic skeletons involving tissue layers (muscles and epithelia). Here we present representative morphological, behavioural and molecular data for parasitic cnidarians (myxozoans) that demonstrate unprecedented variation in form and function, developing as cellular hydrostats. Motile elongate plasmodia characterise a remarkable radiation of species in the genus Ceratomyxa. The vermiform plasmodia inhabit gall bladders of a range of South American freshwater fish and exhibit undulatory motility reminiscent of nematodes but achieved at the cellular level. Collective insights from ultrastructure, confocal and light microscopy along with videos depicting movements highlight key features that we propose explain the unique motility of the plasmodia. These features include cytoskeletal elements (net forming microfilaments and microtubules), a large internal vacuole, a relatively rigid outer glycocalyx and peripherally arranged mitochondria. These constituents provide collective evidence for repurposing of the cnidarian epitheliomuscular cell to support worm‐like motility at the cellular level. The apparent restriction of vermiform ceratomyxids to South American freshwaters suggests an origination via Cretaceous or Miocene marine transgressions and subsequent radiation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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4. Correlated evolution of fish host length and parasite spore size: a tale from myxosporeans inhabiting elasmobranchs.
- Author
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Lisnerová, Martina, Lisner, Aleš, Cantatore, Delfina M.P., Schaeffner, Bjoern C., Pecková, Hana, Tyml, Tomáš, Fiala, Ivan, Bartošová-Sojková, Pavla, and Holzer, Astrid S.
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FISH evolution , *CHONDRICHTHYES , *PARASITES , *SPORES , *FISH parasites , *MARINE habitats , *CNIDARIA - Abstract
[Display omitted] • Eight myxozoans were found in five of nine examined elasmobranch species. • Five new parasite species are formally described. • Myxozoans from elasmobranchs cluster in host group-defined phylogenetic clades. • Ceratomyxa spores from elasmobranchs are approximately 5 times larger than those from teleosts. • Ceratomyxa spore size strongly correlates with host body length and habitat depth. Myxozoa represent a diverse group of microscopic cnidarian endoparasites alternating between invertebrate and vertebrate hosts. Of the approximately 2,600 species described predominantly from teleost fish, only 1.8% have been reported from cartilaginous fishes (Elasmobranchii). As ancestral vertebrate hosts of myxozoans, elasmobranchs may have played an important role in myxozoan evolution, however, they are also some of the largest vertebrate hosts known for this group of parasites. We screened 50 elasmobranchs belonging to nine species and seven families, from various geographical areas, for myxozoan infection. We found a 22% overall prevalence of myxozoans in elasmobranchs and describe five species new to science. We investigated, for the first known time, the evolution of spore size within three phylogenetic clades, Ceratomyxa , Sphaerospora sensu stricto and Parvicapsula. We found that spores from elasmobranch-infecting myxozoans were on average 4.8× (Ceratomyxa), 2.2× (Parvicapsula clade) and 1.8× (Sphaerospora sensu stricto except polysporoplasmic Sphaerospora spp.) larger than those from teleosts. In all analysed clades, spore size was correlated with phylogenetic position. In ceratomyxids, it was further strongly positively correlated with fish body size and habitat depth, independent of cellular composition of the spores and phylogenetic position in the tree. While in macroparasites a host size-correlated increase in parasite size occurs on a large scale and is often related to improved exploitation of host resources, in microscopic parasites size ranges vary at the scale of a few micrometres, disproportionate to the available additional space in a large host. We discuss the ecological role of these changes with regard to transmission under high pressure and an invertebrate fauna that is adapted to deeper marine habitats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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5. Morphological and molecular characterization of Ceratomyxa binhthuanensis n. sp. (Myxosporea: Ceratomyxidae) from the gall bladder of blacktip grouper Epinephelus fasciatus (Perciformes: Serranidae) in the East Sea of Vietnam.
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Chinh, Nguyen Ngoc, Van Ha, Nguyen, Doanh, Pham Ngoc, Violetta, Yurakhno, Yoshinaga, Tomoyoshi, Shirakashi, Sho, Hallett, Sascha L., and Whipps, Christopher M.
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EPINEPHELUS , *GALLBLADDER , *PERCIFORMES , *GROUPERS , *RECOMBINANT DNA , *MYXOZOA - Abstract
A new myxozoan species, Ceratomyxa binhthuanensis n. sp. (Myxosporea: Ceratomyxidae), was found in the gall bladder of blacktip grouper Epinephelus fasciatus (Perciformes: Serranidae) in the East Sea of Vietnam. Myxospores were observed floating free in the gall bladder of 3 out of 20 fish examined (15%). Mature myxospores were elongate and slightly crescent-shaped and measured 12.2 ± 1.3 (10.8–16.0) μm in thickness and 5.8 ± 0.6 (4.8–6.9) μm in length, with two smooth equal shell valves. The two polar capsules were spherical and equal in size, measuring 2.6 ± 0.3 (2.3–2.9) μm in diameter. The posterior angle was slightly concave, 153.7° ± 5.6° (148.9°–166.0°). Molecular analysis of SSU rDNA sequence showed that Ceratomyxa binhthuanensis n. sp. differs from other Ceratomyxa spp. available in GenBank. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that C. binhthuanensis n. sp. was closely related to three species, Ceratomyxa nolani, Ceratomyxa yokoyamai, and Ceratomyxa cutmorei, which also infect fish hosts of the genus Epinephelus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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6. TWO NEW CERATOMYXA SPECIES (MYXOSPOREA: CERATOMYXIDAE) INFECTING THE GALL BLADDER OF MARINE FISHES FROM THE SOUTH-CENTRAL COAST OF VIETNAM.
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Chinh NN, Ha VT, Dien TD, Dang M, Doanh PN, Whipps CM, and Shirakashi S
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- Animals, Vietnam, Gallbladder Diseases parasitology, Gallbladder Diseases veterinary, Fishes parasitology, Prevalence, DNA, Ribosomal chemistry, Smegmamorpha parasitology, Fish Diseases parasitology, Fish Diseases epidemiology, Myxozoa classification, Myxozoa isolation & purification, Myxozoa genetics, Myxozoa anatomy & histology, Gallbladder parasitology, Perciformes parasitology, Parasitic Diseases, Animal parasitology, Parasitic Diseases, Animal epidemiology, Phylogeny
- Abstract
Myxospores discovered floating free in the bile of marine fishes from the south-central coast of Vietnam were identified using morphological and molecular methods, leading to the description of 2 new species. Ceratomyxa chauvanminhi n. sp. was detected in 16% (8/50) of cultured barramundi Lates calcarifer (Bloch) specimens, and Ceratomyxa sekoi n. sp. was found in 20% (5/25) of wild largehead hairtail Trichiurus lepturus Linnaeus specimens. The spores of C. chauvanminhi n. sp. are very shallowly ovoid, slightly crescent shaped, and 11.5 ± 0.5 (10.7-12.4) μm thick, 5.8 ± 0.2 (5.4-6.1) μm long, and 5.5 ± 0.2 (5.2-5.7) μm wide. Their posterior angles are slightly concave at 158.7° ± 4.2° (151.3°-164.8°), and they possess 2 equal spherical polar capsules 2.5 ± 0.2 (2.1-2.9) μm in diameter. The spores of C. sekoi n. sp. are 5.6 ± 0.2 (5.0-6.1) μm long, 75.5 ± 4.8 (68.9-90.0) μm thick, and 5.5 ± 0.1 (5.4-5.6) μm wide, with 2 equal, slightly anterior spherical polar capsules 2.1 ± 0.2 (1.7-2.4) μm in diameter. Although C. sekoi n. sp. spores resemble those of species of MyxodavisiaZhao, Zhou, Kent, and Whipps, 2008, characterized by long tapering valves, genetic analyses distinctly place this new species within the Ceratomyxa Thélohan, 1892 lineage. This study contributes to the understanding myxosporean diversity in Vietnamese waters and highlights the difficulty associated with distinguishing between the genera Ceratomyxa and Myxodavisia., (© American Society of Parasitologists 2024.)
- Published
- 2024
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7. FIRST MOLECULAR EVIDENCE OF CERATOMYXA EPINEPHELA (MYXOZOA: CERATOMYXIDAE) AND ITS GENETIC VARIATION FROM DIFFERENT HOST SPECIES.
- Author
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HUANG Yan-Mei, ZHAO Yuan-Jun, ZHOU Yang, and YANG Cheng-Zhong
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CERATOMYXA ,HOST specificity (Biology) ,EPINEPHELUS akaara ,PHYLOGENETIC models ,MYXOSPOREA - Abstract
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- Published
- 2020
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8. Morphological and molecular characterization of Ceratomyxa batam n. sp. (Myxozoa: Ceratomyxidae) infecting the gallbladder of the cultured Trachinotus ovatus (Perciformes: Carangidae) in Batam Island, Indonesia.
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Qiao, Ying, Shao, Yanxiang, Pengsakul, Theerakamol, Chen, Chao, Zheng, Shuli, Wu, Weijian, and Hardjo, Tonny Budhi
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CERATOMYXA , *TRACHINOTUS , *GALLBLADDER , *CELL morphology , *PHYLOGENY - Abstract
A new coelozoic myxozoan species, Ceratomyxa batam n. sp., was identified in cultured carangid fish, Trachinotus ovatus (Perciformes: Carangidae), in waters off Batam Island of Indonesia. The bi- and trivalved spores were observed in the gallbladder of T. ovatus. Mature bivalved spores of C. batam n. sp. were transversely elongated and narrowly crescent in shape, 3.8 ± 0.36 (2.7–4.6) μm long and 19.2 ± 1.75 (16.2–22.0) μm thick. Two sub-spherical polar capsules were 2.3 ± 0.18 (2.0–2.8) μm long and 2.6 ± 0.16 (2.3–2.9) μm wide. Prevalence was 72.2% in 72 examined T. ovatus according to evaluations dating from November 2016. The maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree based on small subunit rDNA sequence showed similarity with Ceratomyxa robertsthomsoni and Ceratomyxa thalassomae found in Australia. This is the first report of Ceratomyxa species identified in a seawater fish at Batam Island, Indonesia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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9. Morphological and molecular aspects of Ceratomyxa ghannouchensis n. sp. and C. pallida Thélohan 1894 infecting the bogue, Boops boops (l.).
- Author
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Thabet, Aouatef, Abdel-Baki, Abdel-Azeem S., Harrath, Abdel Halim, and Mansour, Lamjed
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RECOMBINANT DNA , *GALLBLADDER , *COASTAL processes (Physical geology) , *DIAMETER - Abstract
We report herein the molecular and morphological characteristics of two myxozoan parasites, Ceratomyxa ghannouchensis n. sp. and Ceratomyxa pallida Thélohan, 1894 infecting the gallbladder of the bogue, Boops boops (Linnaeus, 1758) in the Gulf of Gabès off the Tunisian coast. Mature myxospores of C. ghannouchensis were stubby with a convex anterior end and almost straight to slightly concave posterior one. Mature myxospores measured 5.8 ± 0.4 (5–7) µm in length and 11.7 ± 0.3 (11–13) µm in thickness. Valves were unequal in size with one occasionally tapering to a greater degree than the other. The polar capsules were equal in size, spherical in shape and measured 2 ± 0.2 (1.8–2.8) µm in diameter. Infection with C. pallida occurs as spherical to elongated mono-, di- or trisporic plasmodia floating in the bile. Mature myxospores were crescent-shaped with two symmetrical shell valves with rounded edges. The myxospores measured 6 ± 0.5 (5–7) µm in length and 28.5 ± 2.5 (26–33) µm in thickness. The polar capsules were spherical, equal in size and measured 3 ± 0.3 (2.7–3.3) µm in diameter. Based on the SSU rDNA partial sequence, C. ghannouchensis n. sp. and C. pallida appeared in the same subclade with Ceratomyxa leatherjacketi and Ceratomyxa tunisiensis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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10. Widespread Distribution of Ceratonova shasta (Cnidaria: Myxosporea) Genotypes Indicates Evolutionary Adaptation to its Salmonid Fish Hosts.
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Stinson, Matthew E. T., Atkinson, Stephen D., and Bartholomew, Jerri L.
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CNIDARIA ,GENOTYPES ,SALMONIDAE ,CERATOMYXA ,NEMATODES - Abstract
The distribution of the freshwater myxozoan parasite Ceratonova shasta in the Pacific Northwest of North America is limited to overlap in the ranges of its 2 hosts: the polychaete Manyunkia sp., and Pacific salmonids. Studies in the Klamath River (Oregon/California) and Deschutes River (Oregon), showed that the parasite population is comprised of multiple sympatric genotypes, some of which correlate with particular salmonid host species and with differences in clinical disease in those hosts. The 3 primary genotypes O, I, and II are defined by the number of a specific tri-nucleotide repeat in the internal transcribed spacer-1 region. To understand the spatial extent of host–parasite genotype patterns, we sequenced the parasite from 448 salmonid fishes from river basins in California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and British Columbia, Canada. We sampled intestinal tissues from 6 species of salmon and trout, both those that exist naturally with the parasite (sympatric) and those that do not naturally co-occur with the parasite and were exposed artificially in cages (allopatric). In most river basins we detected the same primary C. shasta genotypes that were described from the Klamath and Deschutes rivers, and we did not detect any novel primary genotypes. Host–parasite genotype patterns were consistent with previous data: genotype O was found in sympatric trout only; genotype I predominantly in Chinook salmon, and genotype II in all 6 fish species but dominant in coho salmon. Our findings of widespread, consistent host–parasite genotype patterns support the hypothesis that C. shasta has a long evolutionary history with salmonid fishes in the Pacific Northwest, and impels additional studies to determine if these parasite genotypes should be considered different species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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11. Correlated evolution of fish host length and parasite spore size: a tale from myxosporeans inhabiting elasmobranchs
- Author
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Astrid S. Holzer, Bjoern C. Schaeffner, Martina Lisnerová, Tomáš Tyml, Ivan Fiala, Hana Pecková, Delfina María Paula Cantatore, Pavla Bartošová-Sojková, and Aleš Lisner
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Spores ,Myxozoa ,Phylogenetic tree ,biology ,Parasitic Diseases, Animal ,Fishes ,Zoology ,Vertebrate ,biology.organism_classification ,Chondrichthyes ,Fish Diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,Elasmobranchii ,biology.animal ,Animals ,Humans ,Macroparasite ,Parasites ,Parasitology ,Ceratomyxa ,Clade ,Phylogeny - Abstract
Myxozoa represent a diverse group of microscopic cnidarian endoparasites alternating between invertebrate and vertebrate hosts. Of the approximately 2,600 species described predominantly from teleost fish, only 1.8% have been reported from cartilaginous fishes (Elasmobranchii). As ancestral vertebrate hosts of myxozoans, elasmobranchs may have played an important role in myxozoan evolution, however, they are also some of the largest vertebrate hosts known for this group of parasites. We screened 50 elasmobranchs belonging to nine species and seven families, from various geographical areas, for myxozoan infection. We found a 22% overall prevalence of myxozoans in elasmobranchs and describe five species new to science. We investigated, for the first known time, the evolution of spore size within three phylogenetic clades, Ceratomyxa, Sphaerospora sensu stricto and Parvicapsula. We found that spores from elasmobranch-infecting myxozoans were on average 4.8× (Ceratomyxa), 2.2× (Parvicapsula clade) and 1.8× (Sphaerospora sensu stricto except polysporoplasmic Sphaerospora spp.) larger than those from teleosts. In all analysed clades, spore size was correlated with phylogenetic position. In ceratomyxids, it was further strongly positively correlated with fish body size and habitat depth, independent of cellular composition of the spores and phylogenetic position in the tree. While in macroparasites a host size-correlated increase in parasite size occurs on a large scale and is often related to improved exploitation of host resources, in microscopic parasites size ranges vary at the scale of a few micrometres, disproportionate to the available additional space in a large host. We discuss the ecological role of these changes with regard to transmission under high pressure and an invertebrate fauna that is adapted to deeper marine habitats.
- Published
- 2022
12. First report of Ceratomyxa scorpaeni (Cnidaria: Myxozoa) from Scorpaena porcus in the Black Sea
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Sevilay Okkay, C. Tolga Gürkanli, Yılmaz Çiftci, Ahmet Özer, and Violetta Yurakhno
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Cnidaria ,Myxozoa ,biology ,Parasitic Diseases, Animal ,Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Black scorpionfish ,biology.organism_classification ,Fish Diseases ,Black Sea ,Scorpaena ,Animals ,Parasite hosting ,Gall ,Cosmopolitan distribution ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ceratomyxa ,Phylogeny ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
Members of the class Myxosporea Bütschli, 1881 have a cosmopolitan distribution in a wide variety of fish species worldwide. In the present study, the black scorpionfish Scorpaena porcus collected from the Sinop coasts of the Black Sea was investigated for myxosporean parasites using both conventional and molecular methods in the period between September 2015 and August 2019. Using morphological and morphometric data, the myxosporean parasite Ceratomyxa scorpaeni Garbouj, Rangel, Castro, Hmissi, Santos, Bahri, 2016 was identified in the gall bladder of host fish. Molecular analysis of the 18S rDNA gene confirmed the identity of this parasite as C. scorpaeni. This is the first report of its occurrence in the Black Sea.
- Published
- 2021
13. <italic>Ceratomyxa gouletti</italic> n. sp. (Myxosporea: Ceratomyxidae), a parasite of the red scorpionfish <italic>Scorpaena scrofa</italic> (L.) from Tunisian waters.
- Author
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Garbouj, Myriam, Bahri, Sihem, Rangel, Luís F., and Santos, Maria J.
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CERATOMYXA , *MYXOSPOREA , *CERATOMYXIDAE , *SCORPAENA , *PLASMODIA , *FISH parasites - Abstract
Ceratomyxa gouletti n. sp. is a new parasite described from the gallbladder of the red scorpionfishScorpaena scrofa (Scorpaeniformes: Scorpaenidae) collected from La Goulette in the Northeast of Tunisia. The parasite develops disporic plasmodia, elliptical to ovoid in shape, measuring up to 33.1 ± 3.6 (28.0-38.2) μm in length and 12.5 ± 2.1 (11.3-14.0) μm in width. Mature spores are elongated transversely and crescent-shaped with rounded ends and unequal shell valves, measuring 8.1 ± 1.27 (7.2-9.0) μm in length and 32.0 ± 2.5 (27.0-38.2) μm in thickness. Sutural line is straight and visible between valves. Polar capsules are subspherical with 3.15 ± 0.63 (2.7-3.6) μm long and 1.9 ± 0.14 (1.8-2.0) μm wide. Posterior spore angle is slightly concave 160°-175°. Molecular analysis based on the small subunit 18S rDNA sequence shows thatC .gouletti n. sp. is different from all other ceratomyxid species DNA sequences in GenBank. Phylogenetic trees clustered the new species with long-branchingCeratomyxa species, and it was closely related to the speciesCeratomyxa longipes from two gadid fish hosts with 89% bootstrap support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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14. Life in a rock pool: Radiation and population genetics of myxozoan parasites in hosts inhabiting restricted spaces.
- Author
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Bartošová-Sojková, Pavla, Lövy, Alena, Reed, Cecile C., Lisnerová, Martina, Tomková, Tereza, Holzer, Astrid S., and Fiala, Ivan
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MYXOZOA , *POPULATION genetics , *CERATOMYXA , *RECOMBINANT DNA , *DAUBED shanny - Abstract
Introduction: Intertidal rock pools where fish and invertebrates are in constant close contact due to limited space and water level fluctuations represent ideal conditions to promote life cycles in parasites using these two alternate hosts and to study speciation processes that could contribute to understanding the roles of parasitic species in such ecosystems. Material and methods: Gall bladder and liver samples from five clinid fish species (Blenniiformes: Clinidae) were morphologically and molecularly examined to determine the diversity, prevalence, distribution and host specificity of Ceratomyxa parasites (Cnidaria: Myxozoa) in intertidal habitats along the coast of South Africa. Phylogenetic relationships of clinid ceratomyxids based on the SSU rDNA, LSU rDNA and ITS regions were assessed additionally to the investigation of population genetic structure of Ceratomyxa cottoidii and subsequent comparison with the data known from type fish host Clinus cottoides. Results and discussion: Seven Ceratomyxa species including previously described Ceratomyxa dehoopi and C. cottoidii were recognized in clinids. They represent a diverse group of rapidly evolving, closely related species with a remarkably high prevalence in their hosts, little host specificity and frequent concurrent infections, most probably as a result of parasite radiation after multiple speciation events triggered by limited host dispersal within restricted spaces. C. cottoidii represents the most common clinid parasite with a population structure characterized by young expanding populations in the south west and south east coast and by older populations in equilibrium on the west coast of its distribution. Parasite and fish host population structures show overlapping patterns and are very likely affected by similar oceanographic barriers possibly due to reduced host dispersal enhancing parasite community differentiation. While fish host specificity had little impact on parasite population structure, the habitat preference of the alternate invertebrate host as well as tidal water exchange may be additional crucial variables affecting the dispersal and associated population structure of C. cottoidii. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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15. Novel Henneguya spp. (Cnidaria: Myxozoa) from cichlid fish in the Amazon basin cluster by geographic origin.
- Author
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Aparecida Zatti, Suellen, Adriano, Edson A., Atkinson, Stephen D., Bartholomew, Jerri L., and Maia, Antônio A. M.
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CNIDARIA , *MYXOZOA , *CICHLIDS , *CICHLA , *CERATOMYXA - Abstract
We describe three new Henneguya spp. (Myxobolidae) found parasitizing two species of cichlid fish from the Amazon basin, Brazil: H. tucunarei n. sp. from gill filaments of Cichla monoculus and H. tapajoensis n. sp. from gill filaments of Cichla pinima, both from the Tapajós River, Pará State and H. jariensis n. sp. in the fins of Cichla monoculus from the Jari River, Amapá State. We based descriptions on myxospore morphology and small subunit ribosomal DNA sequences, and used a phylogenetic analysis to compare the new Henneguya species with known relatives. Spores of the three species had similar morphology and morphometrics, but differed molecularly 5–7.5%, and were no more than 94% similar to any other sequence in GenBank. Together with having different hosts, these data supported the diagnosis of the parasites as distinct, novel species. Maximum likelihood and Bayesian analyses showed that H. tucunarei n. sp., H. tapajoensis n. sp., and H. jariensis n. sp. plus Henneguya paraensis (which parasitizes Cichla temensis) formed a well-supported sub-clade of Henneguya parasites of cichlids from the Amazon basin, in a lineage sister to those in characiforms hosts. Our analysis was consistent with previous studies that suggest that aquatic environment and vertebrate host group are the strongest correlates with phylogenetic signals in the Myxobolidae. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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16. Morphometeric criteria and partial sequence of the 18S rRNA gene of Ceratomyxa sultani n. sp. from the gallbladder of Upeneus margarethae in the Arabian Gulf, with a note on its seasonal prevalence.
- Author
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Abdel-Baki, Abdel-Azeem S., Al-Qahtani, Hussain A., Almalki, Esam, Al-Quraishy, Saleh, Al Ghamdi, Ali, and Mansour, Lamjed
- Abstract
This paper describes a new coelozoic myxosporean parasite named Ceratomyxa sultani n. sp. isolated from the gallbladder of Upeneus margarethae sourced from the Arabian Gulf off Saudi Arabia. Of 104 U. margarethae specimens examined, 27 (26%) were infected, with the highest prevalence in winter and lowest in autumn. The pseudoplasmodia were disporous and irregularly elliptical in shape, with an average size of 22 × 17 μm. Mature spores were mostly elliptical with symmetrical valves and equal spherical polar capsules. Spores were 9 µm in length and 25 µm in thickness, while polar capsules were 4 µm wide with four filament coils. The paper further provides a morphological comparison with closely related Ceratomyxa spp. together with phylogenetic analysis based on the partial 18S rRNA sequence, which revealed that C. sultani n. sp. clustered within a robust clade of Ceratomyxa species from the Arabian Gulf and Red Sea or nearby geographic regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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17. Myxozoan parasites of the European sea bass, Dicentrarchus labrax (Teleostei: Moronidae): Correlates of infections at the micro- and macroenvironment scales.
- Author
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Castro, Ricardo, Cavaleiro, Francisca I., Rangel, Luís F., Rocha, Sónia, Severino, Ricardo, Casal, Graça, and Santos, Maria J.
- Subjects
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EUROPEAN seabass , *MYXOZOA , *FISH farming , *DISEASE prevalence , *CERATOMYXA - Abstract
Infections with myxozoan parasites are a source of concern for fish farm owners, as they can lead to significant economic losses. Owing to such potential detrimental impact, a comprehensive body of knowledge on myxozoans is required and, in this regard, elucidating different aspects of their ecology at the micro- and macroenvironment-level scales is crucial. The present study addresses the correlates of infections at both level-scales, for species of myxozoans occurring in Dicentrarchus labrax (Teleostei: Moronidae), an economically important species of fish for the aquaculture industry. Infection data for Sphaerospora dicentrarchi and S . testicularis (Myxozoa: Sphaerosporidae), and Ceratomyxa diplodae and C . labracis (Myxozoa: Ceratomyxidae), obtained from a total of 764 fish from wild ( N = 373) and cultured ( N = 391) environments, were used in the analyses. The mean prevalences of infection were 79.8% for S . dicentrarchi , 6.2% for S . testicularis and 21.7% for Ceratomyxa spp. At the microenvironment-level scale, a significant relationship was detected between the host sex, age, total weight and length and the prevalences of infection. At the macroenvironment-level scale, the prevalence of S . dicentrarchi was higher in wild than in cultured fish, contrary to that observed for Ceratomyxa spp. The results obtained from the Generalized Linear Model analysis suggest that, the control of the environmental variables which influence the occurrence of infection constitutes a crucial prophilatic measure in the minimization of economic losses occurring in fish farming systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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18. Ceratomyxosis infection in cultured striped red mullet ( Mullus surmuletus Linnaeus 1786) broodstock.
- Author
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Barreiro, L., Caamaño, R., Cabaleiro, S., Ruiz de Ocenda, M., and Villoch, F.
- Subjects
- *
MULLIDAE , *SHELLFISH microbiology , *SHELLFISH , *SHELLFISH culture , *SHELLFISH contamination , *REPRODUCTION - Abstract
Striped red mullet is a commercial valuable species for fisheries. Due to its economic importance, captivity studies were carried out to check the suitability of this species to culture conditions. In order to improve it, a wild-caught broodstock was created and kept in captivity for 4 years. Mullets were very susceptible to handling stress resulting in a high mortality during capture and quarantine stage (45.8%). Once they moved to long-term facilities, they showed good food acceptance and gregarious behaviour, but mortality never disappear. Total survival was 15.86%. Some fish were asymptomatic, but most of them had an extreme weight loss with severe emaciation and cachexia. The histopathological study showed presence of Myxozoa Ceratomyxa sp. parasite in most of the dead fish (>70%). Ceratomyxa sp. was detected in gallbladder, intestine and kidney. The presence of trematodes, nematodes and annelids was occasional, showing lower parasite diversity and prevalence than in natural conditions. This might be due to the pathogen-free diet that can cause a host-parasite imbalance by inducing other parasitic infections. In addition, culture conditions might reduce the immune response and favour ceratomyxosis due to the easily stressed nature of striped red mullet. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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19. Morphological and Phylogenetic Features of Ceratomyxa macapaensis n. sp. (Myxozoa: Ceratomyxidae) in Mesonauta festivus Heckel, 1840 (Cichliformes: Cichlidae) from the Eastern Amazon Region
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José Carlos Tavares Carvalho, Abthyllane Amaral de Carvalho, Marcela Videira, Edilson Matos, Marcelo Francisco da Silva, Luana Silva Bittencourt, Igor Hamoy, and Diehgo Tuloza da Silva
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Myxozoa ,Phylogenetic tree ,biology ,Parasitic Diseases, Animal ,Spores, Protozoan ,Gallbladder ,Zoology ,Cichlids ,biology.organism_classification ,Mesonauta festivus ,Spore ,Fish Diseases ,Taxon ,Genus ,Animals ,Humans ,Parasite hosting ,Parasitology ,Ceratomyxa ,Brazil ,Phylogeny - Abstract
The class Myxozoa consists of microscopic spores that typically present uniform morphological simplifications, containing one or two sporoplasms surrounded by valve cells. The present study analysed the morphological and phylogenetic characteristics of what proved to be a new species of Ceratomyxa found in the gallbladder of Mesonauta festivus Heckel, 1840 captured on the Piririm River in the municipality of Macapa, in Amapa state, Brazil. The fish were collected in gillnets, and were transported alive to Amapa State University in Macapa for the analysis of the organs. Crescent- or arch-shaped free spores were observed under light microscopy, containing two polar capsules and a suture line, which is typical of the morphology of the genus Ceratomyxa, contained within plasmodia that had snake-like movements. The gallbladder was conserved in 80% alcohol for the analysis of the 18S rDNA gene, and in Davidson solution for standardhistology. Ceratomyxa spores (n = 20) were observed in 11 of the 50 samplesanalysed, and thus had a prevalence of 22%, and had a mean length of 4.2 ± 0.5 µm, mean thickness of 22.75 ± 0.3 µm, and two polar capsules, 1.86 ± 0.3 µm long and 1.63 ± 0.1 µm thick. The phylogenetic analysis indicated that the new species forms a cluster with other freshwater Amazonian Ceratomyxa species, described previously. The new species represents the first description of a taxon of the genus Ceratomyxain fish from the Brazilian state of Amapa.
- Published
- 2021
20. Morphological Redescription and Phylogenetical Position of Ceratomyxa truncata Thelohan (1895) and Coccomyxa morovi Léger and Hesse, 1907 (Myxozoa: Myxosporea) Infecting the Gall Bladder of Sardina pilchardus (Walbaum) from Tunisian Coast
- Author
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Jameel Al-Tamimi, Abdel-Azeem S. Abdel-Baki, Aouatef Thabet, Lamjed Mansour, Saber Nahdi, and Suliman Y Alomar
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Myxozoa ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,EUROPEAN PILCHARD ,Zoology ,biology.organism_classification ,Myxosporea ,medicine.drug_formulation_ingredient ,Synonym (taxonomy) ,Genus ,Coccomyxa ,medicine ,Parasitology ,Ceratomyxa - Abstract
Two myxosporean species have been, so far, independently reported from the gallbladder of the European pilchard, Sardina pilchardus (Walbaum) (synonym Clupea pilchardus) in the Northern shore of the Mediterranean Sea; Ceratomyxa truncata Thelohan, and Coccomyxa morovi Leger and Hesse, 1907. The two species were described with incomplete morphological data and based only on line drawings of their mature myxospores. During a parasitological survey in the Southern shores of the Mediterranean coast in the gulf of Gabes off Tunisia, two coelozoic myxosporean species were found in the European pilchard and described using morphological and molecular phylogenetic tools. Morphological characterization was based on the mature myxospore study and some vegetative stages. The SSU rDNA sequences were performed for molecular and phylogenetic study. The most frequently encountered species belongs to the genus Ceratomyxa Thelohan, 1892. The second species belongs to the genus Coccomyxa. Morphological examinations, allowed us to match these two recorded species with Ceratomyxa truncata and Coccomyxa morovi, respectively, as previously described in the same host species referring to the original manuscripts instead of some morphological differences. Molecular analyses based on the partial SSU rDNA sequences did not much with any of the previously reported myxozoan sequences. Phylogenetic analysis positioned C. truncate in a well-supported clade including Ceratomyxa ssp. from Mediterranean Sea, while C. morovi was positioned on the basis of the subclade grouping all Coccomyxidae species. We provided herein a first morphological redescription of Ceratomyxa truncata and Coccomyxa morovi parasite of Sardina pilchardus from the Southern shores of the Mediterranean Sea and we successfully obtained the SSU rDNA sequences of these two species and positioned them in the phylogenetic tree.
- Published
- 2021
21. Molecular diagnostic based on 18S rDNA and supplemental taxonomic data of the cnidarian coelozoic Ceratomyxa (Cnidaria, Myxosporea) and comments on the intraspecific morphological variation
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André C. Morandini, Luis Ramiro Luna Espinoza, Daniele Aparecida Matoso, Anai P. Flores-Gonzales, Fabrício Barros de Sousa, Patrick D. Mathews, Tiago Milanin, and Ana Lúcia Silva Gomes
- Subjects
Cnidaria ,QH301-705.5 ,030231 tropical medicine ,Morphological variation ,Zoology ,Ceratomyxidae ,Intraspecific competition ,Myxosporea ,030308 mycology & parasitology ,ceratomyxid ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Animalia ,parasitic cnidarian ,18s rdna ,Ceratomyxa ,Myxozoa ,Biology (General) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0303 health sciences ,Bivalvulida ,biology ,ornamental fish ,biology.organism_classification ,CNIDARIA ,morphological plasticity ,Brazil - Abstract
Ceratomyxa amazonensis is a cnidarian myxosporean originally described with strongly arcuate crescent-shaped myxospores, absence of vegetative stages and infecting Symphysodon discus, an important Amazonian ornamental fish in the aquarium industry. As part of a long-term investigation concerning myxosporeans that infect discus fish Symphysodon spp. from different rivers of the Amazon Basin, thirty specimens of S. discus collected from Unini River were examined. Plasmodial vegetative stages therefrom were found freely floating in the bile of gall bladders from eighteen fish. Mature myxospores were slightly crescent-shaped, measuring 4.72 ± 0.1 (4.52–4.81) μm in length, 24.2 ± 0.4 (23.9–25.3) μm in thickness with polar capsules 2.31 ± 0.1 (2.29–2.33) μm in length and 2.15 ± 0.1 (2.13–2.17) μm in width. Strong morphological differences were observed between the newly isolated myxospores obtained and the previously described C. amazonensis; however, molecular assessment, based on 18S rDNA, revealed a high similarity (99.91%), with only a single nucleotide base change. This study provides new data, expanding the original description of the species with a discussion on differences in myxospore-morphology in the context of intraspecific morphological plasticity.
- Published
- 2021
22. Morphological and molecular characterization of Ceratomyxa xanthopteri n. sp. (Myxosporea: Ceratomyxidae) from the marine ornamental fish Acanthurus xanthopterus Valenciennes 1835 (Acanthuridae) off Vizhinjam coast, Kerala
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Archana Chandran, Sneha Surendran, P. Vijayagopal, and N. K. Sanil
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Spores ,Acanthurus xanthopterus ,Parasitic Diseases, Animal ,030231 tropical medicine ,India ,Zoology ,030308 mycology & parasitology ,Myxosporea ,Fish Diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Species Specificity ,Animals ,Parasite hosting ,Ceratomyxa ,Myxozoa ,Phylogeny ,0303 health sciences ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Fishes ,Gallbladder ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Acanthuridae ,Perciformes ,Spore ,Infectious Diseases ,Insect Science ,Molecular phylogenetics ,Parasitology ,Polar filament - Abstract
A new species of Ceratomyxa infecting the gallbladder of the marine ornamental fish Acanthurus xanthopterus collected from the Vizhinjam coast of Kerala is described. The parasite exhibited a prevalence of 100%. Mature spores recovered from the gallbladder were slightly crescentic with rounded lateral extremities and possessed convex anterior and slightly concave to straight posterior margins. Spore valves two, equal, joined by a straight and prominent suture. Myxospores measured 5.5 ± 0.6 μm in length and 15.9 ± 2.3 μm in thickness. Polar capsules two, equal, spherical, positioned anteriorly on either sides of the suture, 2.3 ± 0.2 μm long and 2.2 ± 0.2 μm wide. Polar filament with four to five coils, 21.2 ± 0.6 μm when extruded. Posterior angle 173.6 ± 5.2°. Early sporogonic stages and monosporic, disporic, and multisporic plasmodial stages were spherical to irregular in shape, with or without filopodia. Histopathologic analysis revealed that spores and developing stages were attached to the gallbladder wall as well as found free in the lumen. Morphologic and morphometric comparison of the present parasite with known species of Ceratomyxa indicated significant differences. In molecular and phylogenetic analyses, the present myxosporean revealed high divergence with related forms and occupied an independent position within the Ceratomyxa clade with high nodal support. Considering the morphological, morphometric, molecular, and phylogenetic dissimilarities with the previously described species of Ceratomyxa and the differences in host and geographic locations, the present species of myxosporean is treated as new and is named Ceratomyxa xanthopteri n. sp.
- Published
- 2021
23. Prevalence of endoparasites and histopathological evaluation of intestine in Nile tilapia, Oreochromis niloticus (Linnaeus, 1758) from aquaculture pond in Janti, Polanharjo District, Klaten Regency
- Author
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Elisa Herawati, Putri Aji Sutarni, and Agung Budiharjo
- Subjects
Veterinary medicine ,Oreochromis ,Nile tilapia ,biology ,Aquaculture ,business.industry ,Fish farming ,Freshwater fish ,Ceratomyxa ,biology.organism_classification ,business ,Population dynamics of fisheries ,Hatchery - Abstract
Parasitic disease in aquaculture brings a great challenge to fish production. Appropriate control measure and treatment can be carried out if farmers are equipped with sufficient information on the existence of infection and its consequences on fish health. This study aimed to examine the prevalence of endoparasites in the intestine of Nile tilapia (Oreochrois niloticus) and any histological changes associated with the infection. Forty fishes were collected using purposive sampling technique at two location of aquaculture ponds in Janti village from September to December 2019. Each sampling size consisted of 10% of the total fish population in the pond. Identification of parasites was performed based on their morphology according to the standard method. Three genera of nematodes were found from fishes cultured at aquaculture ponds from local farmers, but not from that of PBIAT (Hatchery and Freshwater Fish Aquaculture). The endoparasites were identified as Cichlidogyrus sp., Acanthocephalus sp., and Ceratomyxa sp. with prevalence of 25% and intensity of 1.2%. Histological sections of the intestine of fish infected with these parasites showed alteration in the mucosa layers, such as edema and extension of the mucosa. Information on the presence of endoparasites and its effect on nile tilapia culture is important for fish farmers because it can be used as reference to control fish parasites effectively.
- Published
- 2021
24. Ceratomyxa azevedoi n. sp. (Myxozoa: Myxosporea) parasitizing the gallbladder of Lutjanus ehrenbergii in the Arabian Gulf.
- Author
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Abdel-Baki, Abdel-Azeem, Al-Qahtani, Hussain, Al-Quraishy, Saleh, and Mansour, Lamjed
- Subjects
- *
CERATOMYXA , *MYXOSPOREA , *EURYSPORINA , *GALLBLADDER , *PARASITES - Abstract
A novel myxosporean species, Ceratomyxa azevedoi sp. n. is described from the gallbladder of the blackspot snapper, Lutjanus ehrenbergii (Peters), captured from the Arabian Gulf off Saudi Arabia . A total of 45 (26.8%) out of 168 fish specimens were found to be infected with Ceratomyxa azevedoi sp. n., the highest prevalence being observed in winter (42.9%, 18/42) and the lowest in autumn (11.9%, 5/42). Mature spores appeared as crescent to slightly elliptical-shaped, measuring 5-7 (6) μm in length and 12 (10-14) μm in thickness, with spherical polar capsules containing three polar filament coils. The morphometric and morphological comparison with similar species revealed the taxonomic novelty of this form, suggesting that it should be considered as new species. The phylogenetic analysis of C. azevedoi sp. n., based on partial SSU rDNA sequences, revealed close genetic relatedness to C. buri with 91.3% homogeneity and to C. hamour, with 90.1% homogeneity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Myxosporean parasites of Ceratomyxa merlangi and Myxidium gadi in whiting Merlangius merlangus: a comparative epizootiological analysis based on samples from two localities off southern and northern coasts of the Black Sea.
- Author
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Özer, A., Yurakhno, V., Öztürk, T., and Kornyychuk, Y.
- Subjects
- *
WHITING (Fish) , *MYXOSPOREA , *CERATOMYXA , *MERLANGIUS , *FISH parasites , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Totally 690 and 423 whiting Merlangius merlangus samples were collected from two localities off Southern (Sinop) and Northern coasts (Balaklava Bay) of the Black Sea, respectively, and examined for myxosporeans in the period from May 2011 to March 2014. Ceratomyxa merlangi and Myxidium gadi were the only myxosporean parasites identified in the content of gall bladder and their infection indices of prevalence (%) and intensity were calculated for length classes and sex of fish as well as for the seasons at both sampling localities. Overall infection prevalence of C. merlangi was 22.6% in Sinop and 27.9% in Balaklava samples while those values of M. gadi were 18.4% and 28.6% in Sinop and Balaklava samples, respectively. Both parasite species were also found to be co-existed in whiting samples. This is the first comprehensive epizootiological study yielded comparable data on C. merlangi and M. gadi infections in whiting in the southern and northern coasts of the Black Sea. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Amazonian waters harbour an ancient freshwater Ceratomyxa lineage (Cnidaria: Myxosporea).
- Author
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Zatti, Suellen A., Atkinson, Stephen D., Bartholomew, Jerri L., Maia, Antônio A.M., and Adriano, Edson A.
- Subjects
- *
CERATOMYXA , *CICHLA , *HOST specificity (Biology) , *MARINE ecology , *RIBOSOMAL DNA - Abstract
A new species of Ceratomyxa parasitizing the gall bladder of Cichla monoculus , an endemic cichlid fish from the Amazon basin in Brazil, is described using morphological and molecular data. In the bile, both immature and mature myxospores were found floating freely or inside elongated plasmodia: length 304 (196–402) μm and width 35.7 (18.3–55.1) μm. Mature spores were elongated and only slightly crescent-shaped in frontal view with a prominent sutural line between two valve cells, which had rounded ends. Measurements of formalin-fixed myxospores: length 6.3 ± 0.6 (5.1–7.5) μm, thickness 41.2 ± 2.9 (37.1–47.6) μm, posterior angle 147°. Lateral projections slightly asymmetric, with lengths 19.3 ± 1.4 μm and 20.5 ± 1.3 μm. Two ovoid, equal size polar capsules, length 2.6 ± 0.3 (2–3.3) μm, width 2.5 ± 0.4 (1.8–3.7) μm, located adjacent to the suture and containing polar filaments with 3–4 turns. The small subunit ribosomal DNA sequence of 1605 nt was no more than 97% similar to any other sequence in GenBank, and together with the host, locality and morphometric data, supports diagnosis of the parasite as a new species, Ceratomyxa brasiliensis n. sp. Maximum parsimony and maximum likelihood analyses showed that C. brasiliensis n. sp. clustered within the marine Ceratomyxa clade, but was in a basally divergent lineage with two other freshwater species from the Amazon basin. Our results are consistent with previous studies that show Ceratomyxa species can cluster according to both geography and host ecotype, and that the few known freshwater species diverged from marine cousins relatively early in evolution of the genus, possibly driven by marine incursions into riverine environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Molecular and morphological descriptions of Ceratomyxa collarae n. sp. and Ceratomyxa leucosternoni n. sp. from marine ornamental fishes of Indian waters.
- Author
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Sanil, N., Chandran, Archana, Shamal, P., and Binesh, C.
- Subjects
- *
CERATOMYXA , *ORNAMENTAL fishes , *PARASITES , *AQUATIC animals - Abstract
Two novel species of Ceratomyxa infecting marine ornamental fishes from Indian waters are described. Marine ornamentals, Chaetodon collare and Chaetodon decussatus, collected from Vizhinjam, along the southwest coast of India and Acanthurus leucosternon collected from Lakshadweep islands of Arabian Sea revealed Ceratomyxa infections in their gall bladders. Mature spores of Ceratomyxa from Chaetodon collare and Chaetodon decussatus were elongate and slightly crescentic, with rounded ends, and measured 5.20 ± 0.32 μm in length and 16.32 ± 1.29 μm in thickness. Polar capsules spherical, equal in size and measured 2.23 ± 0.16 μm long and 2.24 ± 0.20 μm wide. Posterior angle measured 157.75 ± 8.650. Principle Component Analysis and molecular analysis using partial SSUrDNA sequences showed the isolates from these two hosts to be identical. Morphological, morphometric and molecular analysis using partial SSUrDNA sequences revealed the taxonomic novelty of isolates and are hence treated as Ceratomyxa collarae n. sp. Mature spores of Ceratomyxa from Acanthurus leucosternon were elongate, slightly tapering with rounded ends, and measured 7.34 ± 0.92 μm in length and 24.37 ± 2.34 μm in thickness. Shell valves were equal, joined by a narrow suture line. Polar capsules spherical in shape, equal in size, 2.59 ± 0.32 μm long and 2.46 ± 0.32 μm wide, and polar filament measured 18.68 ± 2.54 μm. Based on morphological, morphometric and molecular analyses, the present species of Ceratomyxa is distinct, considered as a new species and named Ceratomyxa leucosternoni n. sp. The paper also discusses the prevalence of the recovered parasites and host specificity of Ceratomyxa collarae n. sp. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Morphological description and phylogeny of Ceratomyxa scorpaeni n. sp. (Myxosporea: Ceratomyxidae) infecting the gallbladder of Scorpaena porcus (L.) (Scorpaeniformes: Scorpaenidae) from the bay of Bizerte in Tunisia.
- Author
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Garbouj, Myriam, Rangel, Luís, Castro, Ricardo, Hmissi, Jihene, Santos, Maria, and Bahri, Sihem
- Subjects
- *
RIBOSOMAL DNA , *CERATOMYXA , *SCORPAENA , *SPARIDAE , *CERATOMYXIDAE , *SCORPAENIFORMES - Abstract
A new marine myxosporean species Ceratomyxa scorpaeni n. sp. is described using morphological characteristics and small subunit ribosomal DNA (rDNA) sequence data. The parasite was found infecting the gallbladder of Scorpaena porcus Linnaeus, 1758 collected from the Bay of Bizerte. Mature plasmodia were disporous free floating in the bile. Spores were transversely elongated and crescent-shaped with unequal shell valves and measured 7.6 ± 0.2 (7.2-8.0) μm in length and 32.8 ± 0.3 (21.6-44.0) μm in thickness. Two sub-spherical polar capsules equal in size, situated at the same level and measured 3.0 ± 0.2 (3.0-3.2) μm in length and 2.4 ± 0.3 (2.3-3.3) μm in width. The infection with C. scorpaeni n. sp. was prevalent throughout the year with a maximum prevalence of infection during spring and summer. Molecular analysis of the SSU rRNA gene confirmed the parasite as a new member of the genus Ceratomyxa and showed close relationship with the species of Ceratomyxa infecting the gallbladders of Sparidae from the Mediterranean Sea. This is the first report of Ceratomyxa species from the gallbladder of S. porcus in Tunisian coastal waters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Ceratomyxa mennani n. sp. (Myxosporea: Bivalvulida) parasitizing the gallbladder of the dusky grouper Epinephelus marginatus (Serranidae) from Tunisian waters
- Author
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Maria João Santos, Luis F. Rangel, Sihem Bahri, and Khouloud Bouderbala
- Subjects
Tunisia ,Serranidae ,Parasitic Diseases, Animal ,030231 tropical medicine ,Zoology ,DNA, Ribosomal ,030308 mycology & parasitology ,Myxosporea ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Bivalvulida ,Animals ,Grouper ,Ceratomyxa ,Myxozoa ,Phylogeny ,0303 health sciences ,Sporoplasm ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Gallbladder ,Epinephelus marginatus ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Infectious Diseases ,Seafood ,Insect Science ,Bass ,Parasitology ,Seasons - Abstract
Ceratomyxa mennani n. sp. is a new coelozoic Ceratomyxa species found in the gallbladder of Epinephelus marginatus from the Gulf of Tunis, Tunisia. Mature plasmodia were disporic, ovoid in shape measuring 9-12 μm in width and 11-14 μm in length. Mature myxospores were slightly crescent-shaped with almost straight posterior margin, measuring 5.8 ± 0.2 (5.4-6.1) μm in length and 12.7 ± 0.3 (11.9-13.0) μm in thickness. The two valves were unequal with rounded ends. Polar capsules were spherical, equal in size with 2.1 ± 0.2 (1.9-2.6) μm in diameter. The binucleated sporoplasm filled the entire cavity of the myxospore. Molecular analysis of SSU rDNA sequences indicated that C. mennani n. sp. was distinct from all other Ceratomyxa sequences in GenBank. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that C. mennani n. sp. clustered with Ceratomyxa species infecting Epinephelinae fishes. Seasonal prevalence of infection over one year was significantly higher in winter and the lowest in autumn. This is the third report of Ceratomyxa species infecting the gallbladder of Epinephelus marginatus from Tunisia and the first study to include molecular data.
- Published
- 2020
30. Coelozoic parasite of the family Ceratomyxidae (Myxozoa, Bivalvulida) described from motile vermiform plasmodia found in Hemiodus unimaculatus Bloch, 1794
- Author
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Marcelo Francisco da Silva, Edilson Matos, Igor Hamoy, and Antonio Expedito Ferreira Barroso de Carvalho
- Subjects
Plasmodium ,Parasitic Diseases, Animal ,Zoology ,Fresh Water ,Fish Diseases ,Bivalvulida ,Genus ,Animals ,Ceratomyxa ,Myxozoa ,Phylogeny ,Vermiform ,Sporoplasm ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Gallbladder ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Spore ,Infectious Diseases ,Insect Science ,Freshwater fish ,Parasitology ,Characiformes ,Brazil - Abstract
Myxozoans of the family Ceratomyxidae are common coelozoic parasites of marine, anadromous, and freshwater fish, and may also be found, less frequently, parasitizing the tissue of these hosts. The diversity and ecology of the freshwater species of the genus Ceratomyxa have been poorly investigated, leading to a knowledge gap that restricts the understanding of the distribution and prevalence of this group of parasites. In the present study, parasites were found inside vermiform plasmodia, characterised by oscillatory movements in the characiform species Hemiodus unimaculatus. The crescent-shaped and elongated spores, perpendicular to the suture line, have a mean length of 28.9 ± 2.7 μm and width of 2.6 ± 0.1 μm, with two symmetrical oval polar capsules, 1.9 ± 0.3 μm in length and 1.7 ± 0.2 μm in width, containing polar filaments with three or four coils, located near the central suture, with symmetrical lateral elongations 14.3 ± 1.1 μm in length and binucleate amoeboid sporoplasm. The integrated comparative analysis of the morphological characteristics and partial SSU rRNA sequences supported the identification of a new species of coelozoic Ceratomyxa, found in the gallbladder of H. unimaculatus, from the Tocantins basin, in the municipalities of Estreito and Imperatriz in eastern Brazilian Amazonia.The new species was denominated Ceratomyxa fonsecai n. sp.
- Published
- 2020
31. Diagnosis of Myxosporean of infections in sea bream (Sparus aurata Linneaus, 1758) by different methods
- Author
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Şirin, Caner, Çağırgan, Haşmet, and Ege Üniversitesi, Fen Bilimleri Enstitüsü, Su Ürünleri Yetiştiricilik Ana Bilim Dalı
- Subjects
Gilthead Seabream ,Ceratomyxa ,Balık Parazitleri ,Çipura ,Myxozoa ,Fish Parasites ,Sparus Aurata - Abstract
Bu tez çalışmasında yetiştiriciliği yapılan çipura balıklarının safra kesesini enfekte eden iki farklı Ceratomyxa türünün (Ceratomyxa sp.1 ve Ceratomyxa sp.2) morfolojik ve moleküler düzeyde tanımlaması yapılmıştır. Tespit edilen iki parazitin hem kendi aralarında hem de bilinen diğer Ceratomyxa türleri ile morfolojik ve morfometrik farklılıklara sahip olduğu belirlenmiştir. 18S rDNA dizi sonuçlarına bağlı olarak Ceratomyxa sp.1’in daha önce tanımlanan Ceratomyxa sp. 2 ex Sparus aurata ile aynı tür olduğu, Ceratomyxa sp.2 türünün ise GenBank veri tabanında bulunan diğer tüm Ceratomyxa türlerine ait DNA dizilerinden farklılık gösterdiği tespit edilmiştir. Filogenetik analizler sonucunda mevcut iki türün Akdeniz Bölgesi’nde farklı konaklardan rapor edilmiş diğer Ceratomyxa türleri ile kümelendiğini ortaya koymaktadır. Bu çalışma Türkiye’de yetiştiriciliği yapılan çipura balıklarından morfolojik ve moleküler yöntemler kullanılarak tanımlanan Ceratomyxa türlerinin ilk raporu niteliğindedir., In this thesis, morphological and molecular identification of two different Ceratomyxa species (Ceratomyxa sp.1 and Ceratomyxa sp.2) infecting the gallbladder of cultured gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata) were described. It was determined that present parasites had morphological and morphometric differences both among themselves and with the other known Ceratomyxa species. According to the results of 18S rDNA sequence, Ceratomyxa sp.1 was determined to be the same species as the previously described Ceratomyxa sp.2 ex Sparus aurata and Ceratomyxa sp.2 was found to be different from all other Ceratomyxa sp. DNA sequences in GenBank. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the two described species cluster with other Ceratomyxa species reported from different hosts in the Mediterranean region. This study is the first report of Ceratomyxa species identified with morphological and molecular methods from cultured gilthead sea bream in Turkey.
- Published
- 2022
32. How to build single-celled cnidarians with worm-like motility: Lessons from Myxozoa
- Author
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Edson A. Adriano, Suellen A. Zatti, and Beth Okamura
- Subjects
Cnidaria ,Vermiform ,Histology ,Myxozoa ,biology ,Motility ,Gallbladder ,Hydrostatic skeleton ,Cell Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Microfilament ,Cell biology ,Fish Diseases ,parasitic diseases ,Ultrastructure ,Animals ,Ceratomyxa ,Anatomy ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Phylogeny ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Metazoans with worm-like morphologies across diverse and disparate groups typically demonstrate motility generated by hydrostatic skeletons involving tissue layers (muscles and epithelia). Here we present representative morphological, behavioural and molecular data for parasitic cnidarians (myxozoans) that demonstrate unprecedented variation in form and function, developing as cellular hydrostats. Motile elongate plasmodia characterise a remarkable radiation of species in the genus Ceratomyxa. The vermiform plasmodia inhabit gall bladders of a range of South American freshwater fish and exhibit undulatory motility reminiscent of nematodes but achieved at the cellular level. Collective insights from ultrastructure, confocal and light microscopy along with videos depicting movements highlight key features that we propose explain the unique motility of the plasmodia. These features include cytoskeletal elements (net forming microfilaments and microtubules), a large internal vacuole, a relatively rigid outer glycocalyx and peripherally arranged mitochondria. These constituents provide collective evidence for repurposing of the cnidarian epitheliomuscular cell to support worm-like motility at the cellular level. The apparent restriction of vermiform ceratomyxids to South American freshwaters suggests an origination via Cretaceous or Miocene marine transgressions and subsequent radiation.
- Published
- 2021
33. Morphology and small subunit rDNA-based phylogeny of Ceratomyxa amazonensis n. sp. parasite of Symphysodon discus, an ornamental freshwater fish from Amazon.
- Author
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Mathews, Patrick, Naldoni, Juliana, Maia, Antonio, and Adriano, Edson
- Subjects
- *
FISH parasites , *RECOMBINANT DNA , *CERATOMYXA , *DISCUS (Fish) , *PHYLOGENY , *FRESHWATER fishes - Abstract
The specious genus Ceratomyxa Thélodan, 1892, infect mainly gallbladder of marine fishes, with only five species reported infecting species from freshwater environment. This study performed morphological and phylogenetic analyses involving a new Ceratomyxa species ( Ceratomyxa amazonensis n. sp.) found in gallbladder of Symphysodon discus Heckel, 1840 (Perciformes: Cichlidae), an important ornamental fish endemic to Amazon basin. Mature spores were strongly arcuate shaped and measured 7.0 ± 0.3 (6.2-7.6) μm in length, 15.8 ± 0.4 (15.0-16.7) μm in thickness, and polar capsules 3.22 ± 0.34 (2.4-3.6) μm in length and 2.63 ± 0.17 (2.4-2.9) μm in width. This was the first small subunit ribosomal DNA (SS rDNA) sequencing performed to Ceratomyxa species parasite of freshwater fish, and the phylogenetic analysis showed C. amazonensis n. sp. clustering in the early diverging subclade of the ceratomyxids, together with species of parasites of amphidromous/estuaries fishes, suggesting some role of the transition of the fishes between marine/freshwater environments in the evolutionary history of these parasites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Ceratomyxa tunisiensis n. sp. (Myxosporea: Bivalvulida) from the Gallbladders of Two Carangid Fish Caught Off the Coast of Tunisia.
- Author
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Thabet, Aouatef, Mansour, Lamjed, Al Omar, Suliman Y., and Tlig‐Zouari, Sabiha
- Subjects
- *
CARANGIDAE , *CERATOMYXA , *MYXOSPOREA , *CARANX , *TRACHURUS trachurus - Abstract
A new coelozoic Myxozoan species, Ceratomyxa tunisiensis n. sp., was found infecting the gallbladders of two carangid fish, Caranx rhonchus and Trachurus trachurus (Perciforme, Carangidae), from the Gulf of Gabès, on the southern coast of Tunisia. The parasite develops in spherical mono-, diplo-, or polysporic tropozoites in the gallbladder of the hosts. Mature spores are typical of the genus Ceratomyxa. They are transversely elongated and narrowly crescent-shaped with a slightly convex anterior and concave posterior, and measure 23 ± 0. 27 (20-25) μm width × 6 ± 0.26 (5-8) μm in length. Spore shell valves are symmetrical with rounded ends. Two spherical polar capsules situated on either side of the sutural line measure 2.2 μm (2.0-3.0) in diam. Periodical sampling of C. rhonchus and T. trachurus from Marsh 2012 to February 2013 showed that infection due to C. tunisiensis occurs in 59% and 69% of the examined fish, respectively. Molecular analysis based on the small subunit ( SSU) rRNA sequence shows high genetic divergence with all other ceratomyxid species. A Maximum Likelihood phylogenetic tree shows association with the species C. leatharjecketi Fiala, kova, Kodadkova, Freeman, Bartošova-Sojkova, and Atkinson, 2015 reported from the gallbladder of Aluterusmonoceros (L.) caught in the Andaman Sea, off Malaysia. Nonetheless, the SSU rRNA sequences of C. tunisiensis and C. leatharjecketi have only a 90% similarity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Two novel myxosporean parasite species of Ceratomyxa Thélohan, 1892 from the banded cusk-eel Raneya brasiliensis (Kaup) (Ophidiiformes: Ophidiidae) off Patagonia, Argentina
- Author
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Stephen D. Atkinson, Dorothée Huchon, Gema Alama-Bermejo, and Jesús S. Hernández-Orts
- Subjects
Myxozoa ,biology ,Parasitic Diseases, Animal ,Argentina ,Fishes ,Zoology ,Ophidiiformes ,biology.organism_classification ,Fish Diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,Phylogenetics ,Polar capsule ,Gall ,Parasite hosting ,Animals ,Parasitology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Ceratomyxa ,Phylogeny - Abstract
We described two novel myxozoan parasite species Ceratomyxa argentina n. sp. and Ceratomyxa raneyae n. sp. from the gall bladder of Raneya brasiliensis (Kaup) from the Patagonian coast of Argentina. Both species can be distinguished from other ceratomyxids by myxospore and polar capsule (nematocyst) morphology and morphometry, fish host and geographic locality. Phylogenetic reconstruction using ssrDNA gene sequences showed that the two new species are placed in a long-branching ceratomyxid clade which also include Ceratomyxa appendiculata Thelohan, 1892, Ceratomyxa anko Freeman, Yokoyama and Ogawa, 2008, Ceratomyxa pantherini Gunter, Burger and Adlard, 2010 and Pseudoalataspora kovalevae Kalavati, MacKenzie, Collins, Hemmingsen and Brickle, 2013. This study documents additional biodiversity of marine myxozoans in the South Atlantic, a region still largely unexplored for this group of parasitic cnidarians.
- Published
- 2021
36. Morphological and molecular characterization of Ceratomyxa batam n. sp. (Myxozoa: Ceratomyxidae) infecting the gallbladder of the cultured Trachinotus ovatus (Perciformes: Carangidae) in Batam Island, Indonesia
- Author
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Ying Qiao, Chao Chen, Weijian Wu, Tonny Budhi Hardjo, Theerakamol Pengsakul, Yanxiang Shao, and Shuli Zheng
- Subjects
Spores ,Parasitic Diseases, Animal ,Zoology ,DNA, Ribosomal ,Perciformes ,Fish Diseases ,Animals ,Parasite hosting ,Seawater ,Ceratomyxa ,Myxozoa ,Phylogeny ,Trachinotus ovatus ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Fishes ,Gallbladder ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Spore ,Infectious Diseases ,Indonesia ,Carangidae ,Insect Science ,Parasitology - Abstract
A new coelozoic myxozoan species, Ceratomyxa batam n. sp., was identified in cultured carangid fish, Trachinotus ovatus (Perciformes: Carangidae), in waters off Batam Island of Indonesia. The bi- and trivalved spores were observed in the gallbladder of T. ovatus. Mature bivalved spores of C. batam n. sp. were transversely elongated and narrowly crescent in shape, 3.8 ± 0.36 (2.7-4.6) μm long and 19.2 ± 1.75 (16.2-22.0) μm thick. Two sub-spherical polar capsules were 2.3 ± 0.18 (2.0-2.8) μm long and 2.6 ± 0.16 (2.3-2.9) μm wide. Prevalence was 72.2% in 72 examined T. ovatus according to evaluations dating from November 2016. The maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree based on small subunit rDNA sequence showed similarity with Ceratomyxa robertsthomsoni and Ceratomyxa thalassomae found in Australia. This is the first report of Ceratomyxa species identified in a seawater fish at Batam Island, Indonesia.
- Published
- 2019
37. Morphological and molecular aspects of Ceratomyxa ghannouchensis n. sp. and C. pallida Thélohan 1894 infecting the bogue, Boops boops (l.)
- Author
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Abdel Halim Harrath, Abdel-Azeem S. Abdel-Baki, Lamjed Mansour, and Aouatef Thabet
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Teleostei ,Myxozoa ,biology ,010607 zoology ,Zoology ,Ceratomyxa ,Boops boops ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
We report herein the molecular and morphological characteristics of two myxozoan parasites, Ceratomyxa ghannouchensis n. sp. and Ceratomyxa pallida Thelohan, 1894 infecting the gallbladder of the b...
- Published
- 2019
38. Morphological and molecular aspects of Ceratomyxa mehlhorni n. sp., a parasite of the golden trevally Gnathanodon speciosus in the Arabian Gulf off the Saudi Arabian coast, with data on its seasonal prevalence.
- Author
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Mansour, Lamjed, Abdel-Baki, Abdel-Azeem, Al-Qahtani, Hussain, and Al-Quraishy, Saleh
- Subjects
- *
CARANGIDAE , *CERATOMYXA , *PHYLOGENY , *NUCLEOTIDE sequencing , *GALLBLADDER - Abstract
During a survey of the myxosporean fauna of the golden trevally Gnathanodon speciosus from the Arabian Gulf off Saudi Arabia, a species of Ceratomyxa that did not conform to any known species was recorded. The infection was detected as a large number of mature spores free-floating in the bile. Mature spores were hat- or helm-like in the frontal view with two short and unequal valves. The spores measured 8 (7-9) × 12 (10-14). The two polar capsules were spherical, equal in size and measured 3 (2-4) in diameter with three filament turns. Sporoplasm was binucleated and filled the whole extracapsular space. The small subunit ribosomal DNA sequence of this species did not match any available sequences in GenBank. The lowest genetic distance was 0.017, observed with Ceratomyxa moseri infecting Pomacentrus wardi from Australia's Great Barrier Reef. A maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree showed a close association between the new species and a variety of ceratomyxid species, including Ceratomyxa arabica reported from the Arabian Gulf. Given the morphological and molecular differences between this species and other Ceratomyxa spp., we proposed the present form was a new species and the name Ceratomyxa mehlhorni sp. n. for this parasite from the gallbladder of G. speciosus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Data on Ten New Myxosporean Parasites (Myxozoa, Myxosporea, Bivalvulida) from the Yellow Sea, China.
- Author
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Yuanjun ZHAO, AL-FARRAJ, Saleh A., AL-RASHEID, Khaled A. S., and Weibo SONG
- Subjects
- *
MYXOSPOREA , *MARINE fishes , *KAREIUS bicoloratus , *CERATOMYXA - Abstract
Ten new species of myxosporeans found from marine fishes were collected from coastal waters off the Yellow Sea in China: Sphaerospora sebasta sp. n. coelozoic in the gall bladder of Sebastes schlegeli, Ceratomyxa hemitriptera sp. n. coelozoic in the gall bladder of Hemitripterus villosus, Ceratomyxa kareus sp. n. coelozoic in the gall bladders of Kareius bicoloratus and Zebrias zebra, Ceratomyxa lateolabrax sp. n. and Ceratomyxa lomi sp. n. coelozoic in the gall bladder of Lateolabrax japonicus, Ceratomyxa qingdaoensis sp. n. coelozoic in the urinary bladder of Argyrosomus argentatus, Ceratomyxa saurida sp. n. coelozoic in the gall bladder of Saurida elongata, Ceratomyxa sebastisca sp. n. coelozoic in the gall bladder of Sebastiscus sp., Ceratomyxa simplex sp. n. coelozoic in the gall bladder of Chirolophis japonicus and Ceratomyxa triacantha sp. n. coelozoic in the gall bladder and bile of Triacanthus brevirostris. All those forms were described in a book chapter cited as "known forms" several years ago, but have never been formally established as new taxa which are thus officially reported here. The present contribution only provided the morphology and geographic distribution of these organisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Ultrastructure and phylogeny of Ceratomyxa auratae n. sp. (Myxosporea: Ceratomyxidae), a parasite infecting the gilthead seabream Sparus aurata (Teleostei: Sparidae).
- Author
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Rocha, Sónia, Casal, Graça, Rangel, Luís, Castro, Ricardo, Severino, Ricardo, Azevedo, Carlos, and Santos, Maria João
- Subjects
- *
FISH parasites , *CERATOMYXA , *MICROORGANISM phylogeny , *MYXOSPOREA , *SPARUS aurata - Abstract
A new myxosporean parasite is described from the gall bladder of the gilthead seabream Sparus aurata in a Southern Portuguese fish farm, with basis on light and transmission electron microscopy, as well as in molecular procedures. In the bile, young and mature mono- to disporic plasmodia were elliptical and presented smooth surface membranes. Crescent-shaped myxospores measured 6.7 ± 0.7 (5.3–7.6) μm in length and 27.0 ± 3.0 (19.7–31.2) μm in thickness. The myxospore wall was constituted by two symmetrical valves united along a slightly curved suture line, each presenting a lateral projection with a rounded end. Two equal-sized subspherical polar capsules, measuring 3.6 ± 0.2 (2.9–3.8) μm in length and 3.5 ± 0.3 (2.9–3.8) μm in width, were located at the same level, each displaying a polar filament coiled in 5 turns. Molecular analysis of the SSU rRNA gene confirmed the parasite as a new member of the genus Ceratomyxa , making this the fourth report of Ceratomyxa from the gall bladder of S. aurata in the Iberian Peninsula. This reinforces the assumption that species richness of ceratomyxids in South European sparids is high, but the phylogenetic analysis performed disagrees with the existence of a common ancestor for Ceratomyxa species infecting sparid hosts, as well as their clustering according to geographical location. The main Ceratomyxa clade is not monophyletic due to the inclusion of Palliatus indecorus and Pseudoalatospora kovalevae ; a situation that will probably be resolved by the taxonomic revision of these genera. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Evolutionary origin of Ceratonova shasta and phylogeny of the marine myxosporean lineage.
- Author
-
Fiala, Ivan, Hlavničková, Marie, Kodádková, Alena, Freeman, Mark A., Bartošová-Sojková, Pavla, and Atkinson, Stephen D.
- Subjects
- *
EVOLUTIONARY theories , *MOLECULAR phylogeny , *MARINE ecology , *RECOMBINANT DNA , *MYXOSPOREA , *CERATOMYXA - Abstract
In order to clarify the phylogenetic relationships among the main marine myxosporean clades including newly established Ceratonova clade and scrutinizing their evolutionary origins, we performed large-scale phylogenetic analysis of all myxosporean species from the marine myxosporean lineage based on three gene analyses and statistical topology tests. Furthermore, we obtained new molecular data for Ceratonova shasta , C . gasterostea , eight Ceratomyxa species and one Myxodavisia species. We described five new species: Ceratomyxa ayami n. sp., C . leatherjacketi n. sp., C . synaphobranchi n. sp., C . verudaensis n. sp. and Myxodavisia bulani n. sp.; two of these formed a new, basal Ceratomyxa subclade. We identified that the Ceratomyxa clade is basal to all other marine myxosporean lineages, and Kudoa with Enteromyxum are the most recently branching clades. Topologies were least stable at the nodes connecting the marine urinary clade, the marine gall bladder clade and the Ceratonova clade. Bayesian inference analysis of SSU rDNA and the statistical tree topology tests suggested that Ceratonova is closely related to the Enteromyxum and Kudoa clades, which represent a large group of histozoic species. A close relationship between Ceratomyxa and Ceratonova was not supported, despite their similar myxospore morphologies. Overall, the site of sporulation in the vertebrate host is a more accurate predictor of phylogenetic relationships than the morphology of the myxospore. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Morphology, phylogeny and seasonal prevalence of Ceratomyxa arabica n. sp. (Myxozoa: Myxosporea) infecting the gallbladder of Acanthopagrus bifasciatus (Pisces: Sparidae) from the Arabian Gulf, Saudi Arabia.
- Author
-
Al-Qahtani, Hussain, Mansour, Lamjed, Al-Quraishy, Saleh, and Abdel-Baki, Abdel-Azeem
- Subjects
- *
CERATOMYXA , *ACANTHOPAGRUS , *FISH diseases , *MYXOZOA , *DISEASE prevalence - Abstract
A new myxozoan species was recovered from the gallbladder of Acanthopagrus bifasciatus from the Arabian Gulf in Saudi Arabia. The overall prevalence of infection was 28.6 % (32/112), with the highest prevalence 42.9 % (12/28) in winter and 10.7 % (3/28) as the lowest in autumn. The new species is described using its morphological characteristics and small subunit (SSU) rDNA. Spores of Ceratomyxa arabica n. sp. are stubby-shaped with unequal shell valves, 8 (7-9) μm in length × 12 (10-14) μm in thickness. Polar capsules are sub-spherical, unequal, 3 (2.5-3.5) × 2 (1.5-2.5) μm. The polar filament has three turns and is slightly slanted towards the longitudinal axis of the capsules. The small subunit rDNA (SSU rDNA) sequence confirms that the present species is a member of the genus Ceratomyxa, being most closely related to Ceratomyxa cardinalis with a sequence similarity of 97.77 %. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Molecular and Morphometric Characteristics of Ceratomyxa hamour n. sp. (Myxosporea: Bivalvulida) Infecting the Gallbladder of the Orange-spotted Grouper Epinephelus coioides from the Arabian Gulf, Saudi Arabia.
- Author
-
Mansour, Lamjed, Al‐Qahtani, Hussain A., Al‐Quraishy, Saleh, and Abdel‐Baki, Abdel‐Azeem S.
- Subjects
- *
CERATOMYXA , *GROUPERS , *GALLBLADDER diseases , *FISH parasites , *EPINEPHELUS , *SPORES , *MORPHOMETRICS , *DISEASES - Abstract
Ceratomyxa hamour n. sp. was found to infect the gallbladder of the orange-spotted grouper, Epinephelus coioides located off the Saudi Arabian coast of the Arabian Gulf. The infection was reported as a free-floating spore in the bile, and pseudoplasmodia were not observed. Mature spores were crescent-shaped and measured on average 7 μm in length and 16 μm in thickness. The polar capsule, meanwhile, had length to width measurements of 4 μm and 3 μm on average. A periodical survey was conducted throughout a sampling period between December 2012 and December 2013, with the results showing that the parasite was present throughout the year with a mean prevalence of 32.6%. The objective of this study was to characterize this new species based on its morphological and molecular differences from previously described species. Molecular analysis based on the partial sequence of the SSU r DNA gene, showed the highest similarity (97.8%) to Ceratomyxa buri, reported in the cultured yellow tail Seriola quinqueradiata in Japan. Indeed, C. buri and the new species described here formed an individual cluster with a high degree of bootstrap support. This is the first reported species of genus Ceratomyxa from the Arabian Gulf fishes off Saudi Arabia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Erection of Ceratonova n. gen. (Myxosporea: Ceratomyxidae) to Encompass Freshwater Species C. gasterostea n. sp. from Threespine Stickleback ( Gasterosteus aculeatus) and C. shasta n. comb. from Salmonid Fishes.
- Author
-
Atkinson, S. D., Foott, J. S., and Bartholomew, J. L.
- Subjects
GASTEROSTEUS ,MYXOSPOREA ,CERATOMYXA ,SALMONIDAE ,PARASITIC diseases - Abstract
Ceratonova gasterostea n. gen. n. sp. is described from the intestine of freshwater Gasterosteus aculeatus L. from the Klamath River, California. Myxospores are arcuate, 22.4 ± 2.6 μm thick, 5.2 ± 0.4 μm long, posterior angle 45° ± 24°, with 2 sub-spherical polar capsules, diameter 2.3 ± 0.2 μm, which lie adjacent to the suture. Its ribosomal small subunit sequence was most similar to an intestinal parasite of salmonid fishes, Ceratomyxa shasta (97%, 1,671/1,692 nucleotides), and distinct from all other Ceratomyxa species (<85%), which are typically coelozoic parasites in the gall bladder or urinary system of marine fishes. We propose erection of genus Ceratonova to contain both intestinal, freshwater species and reassign the salmonid parasite as Ceratonova shasta n. comb. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Ceratomyxa gouletti n. sp. (Myxosporea: Ceratomyxidae), a parasite of the red scorpionfish Scorpaena scrofa (L.) from Tunisian waters
- Author
-
Myriam Garbouj, Sihem Bahri, Luis F. Rangel, and Maria João Santos
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Tunisia ,Parasitic Diseases, Animal ,Scorpaenidae ,Spores, Protozoan ,Scorpaeniformes ,Zoology ,Scorpaena scrofa ,DNA, Ribosomal ,Myxosporea ,Fish Diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,RNA, Ribosomal, 18S ,Animals ,Parasite hosting ,Ceratomyxa ,Myxozoa ,Phylogeny ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Fishes ,Gallbladder ,General Medicine ,030108 mycology & parasitology ,biology.organism_classification ,Perciformes ,Spore ,Infectious Diseases ,Insect Science ,Parasitology - Abstract
Ceratomyxa gouletti n. sp. is a new parasite described from the gallbladder of the red scorpionfish Scorpaena scrofa (Scorpaeniformes: Scorpaenidae) collected from La Goulette in the Northeast of Tunisia. The parasite develops disporic plasmodia, elliptical to ovoid in shape, measuring up to 33.1 ± 3.6 (28.0-38.2) μm in length and 12.5 ± 2.1 (11.3-14.0) μm in width. Mature spores are elongated transversely and crescent-shaped with rounded ends and unequal shell valves, measuring 8.1 ± 1.27 (7.2-9.0) μm in length and 32.0 ± 2.5 (27.0-38.2) μm in thickness. Sutural line is straight and visible between valves. Polar capsules are subspherical with 3.15 ± 0.63 (2.7-3.6) μm long and 1.9 ± 0.14 (1.8-2.0) μm wide. Posterior spore angle is slightly concave 160°-175°. Molecular analysis based on the small subunit 18S rDNA sequence shows that C. gouletti n. sp. is different from all other ceratomyxid species DNA sequences in GenBank. Phylogenetic trees clustered the new species with long-branching Ceratomyxa species, and it was closely related to the species Ceratomyxa longipes from two gadid fish hosts with 89% bootstrap support.
- Published
- 2018
46. Synopsis of the species of Ceratomyxa Thélohan, 1892 (Cnidaria, Myxosporea, Ceratomyxidae) described between 2007 and 2017
- Author
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Jorge C. Eiras, Aurélia Saraiva, and Cristina Cruz
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Cnidaria ,Morphometrics ,biology ,Zoology ,Morphology (biology) ,030108 mycology & parasitology ,biology.organism_classification ,Host Specificity ,Myxosporea ,03 medical and health sciences ,Species Specificity ,Animal ecology ,GenBank ,Parasitic Diseases ,Animals ,Parasitology ,Ceratomyxa ,Myxozoa ,Ceratomyxidae - Abstract
A synopsis of the species of Ceratomyxa Thélohan, 1892 (Cnidaria, Myxosporea, Ceratomyxidae) described between 2007 and 2017 is presented, including 83 nominal species. For each species, the most important morphological and morphometric features are indicated in tabulated format. Included are also the site of infection within the host, and geographical location, plus a full bibliography of the original records of species. Molecular data (GenBank accession numbers) are also provided whenever possible.
- Published
- 2018
47. Morphometeric criteria and partial sequence of the 18S rRNA gene of Ceratomyxa sultani n. sp. from the gallbladder of Upeneus margarethae in the Arabian Gulf, with a note on its seasonal prevalence
- Author
-
Lamjed Mansour, Ali Al Ghamdi, Hussain A. Al-Qahtani, Saleh Al-Quraishy, Esam S. Al-Malki, and Abdel-Azeem S. Abdel-Baki
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Zoology ,030108 mycology & parasitology ,biology.organism_classification ,18S ribosomal RNA ,Myxosporea ,Spore ,03 medical and health sciences ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Phylogenetics ,Parasite hosting ,Ceratomyxa ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Clade ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 - Abstract
This paper describes a new coelozoic myxosporean parasite named Ceratomyxa sultani n. sp. isolated from the gallbladder of Upeneus margarethae sourced from the Arabian Gulf off Saudi Arabia. Of 104 U. margarethae specimens examined, 27 (26%) were infected, with the highest prevalence in winter and lowest in autumn. The pseudoplasmodia were disporous and irregularly elliptical in shape, with an average size of 22 × 17 μm. Mature spores were mostly elliptical with symmetrical valves and equal spherical polar capsules. Spores were 9 µm in length and 25 µm in thickness, while polar capsules were 4 µm wide with four filament coils. The paper further provides a morphological comparison with closely related Ceratomyxa spp. together with phylogenetic analysis based on the partial 18S rRNA sequence, which revealed that C. sultani n. sp. clustered within a robust clade of Ceratomyxa species from the Arabian Gulf and Red Sea or nearby geographic regions. Keywords: Myxosporea, Coelozoic, Ceratomyxa, Phylogeny, Seasonal variation
- Published
- 2018
48. Myxozoan parasites of the European sea bass, Dicentrarchus labrax (Teleostei: Moronidae): Correlates of infections at the micro- and macroenvironment scales
- Author
-
Ricardo de Castro, Francisca I. Cavaleiro, Luis F. Rangel, Graça Casal, Sónia Rocha, Maria João Santos, and Ricardo Severino
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Teleostei ,Myxozoa ,Ecology ,Host (biology) ,Fish farming ,Zoology ,030108 mycology & parasitology ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Dicentrarchus ,Ceratomyxa ,Sea bass ,Moronidae - Abstract
Infections with myxozoan parasites are a source of concern for fish farm owners, as they can lead to significant economic losses. Owing to such potential detrimental impact, a comprehensive body of knowledge on myxozoans is required and, in this regard, elucidating different aspects of their ecology at the micro- and macroenvironment-level scales is crucial. The present study addresses the correlates of infections at both level-scales, for species of myxozoans occurring in Dicentrarchus labrax (Teleostei: Moronidae), an economically important species of fish for the aquaculture industry. Infection data for Sphaerospora dicentrarchi and S . testicularis (Myxozoa: Sphaerosporidae), and Ceratomyxa diplodae and C . labracis (Myxozoa: Ceratomyxidae), obtained from a total of 764 fish from wild ( N = 373) and cultured ( N = 391) environments, were used in the analyses. The mean prevalences of infection were 79.8% for S . dicentrarchi , 6.2% for S . testicularis and 21.7% for Ceratomyxa spp. At the microenvironment-level scale, a significant relationship was detected between the host sex, age, total weight and length and the prevalences of infection. At the macroenvironment-level scale, the prevalence of S . dicentrarchi was higher in wild than in cultured fish, contrary to that observed for Ceratomyxa spp. The results obtained from the Generalized Linear Model analysis suggest that, the control of the environmental variables which influence the occurrence of infection constitutes a crucial prophilatic measure in the minimization of economic losses occurring in fish farming systems.
- Published
- 2018
49. Flow variation and substrate type affect dislodgement of the freshwater polychaete, Manayunkia speciosa.
- Author
-
Malakauskas, David M., Willson, Sarah J., Wilzbach, Margaret A., and Som, Nicholas A.
- Subjects
- *
POLYCHAETA , *FLOW velocity , *MANAYUNKIA , *CERATOMYXA - Abstract
We quantified microscale flow forces and their ability to entrain the freshwater polychaete, Manayunkia speciosa, the intermediate host for 2 myxozoan parasites (Ceratomyxa shasta and Parvicapsula minibicornis) that cause substantial mortalities in salmonid fishes in the Pacific Northwest. In a laboratory flume, we measured the shear stress associated with 2 mean flow velocities and 3 substrates and quantified associated dislodgement of polychaetes, evaluated survivorship of dislodged polychaetes, and observed behavioral responses of the polychaetes in response to increased flow. We used a generalized linear mixed model to estimate the probability of polychaete dislodgement for treatment combinations of velocity (mean flow velocity = 55 cm/s with a shear velocity = 3 cm/s, mean flow velocity = 140 cm/s with a shear velocity = 5 cm/s) and substrate type (depositional sediments and analogs of rock faces and the filamentous alga, Cladophora). Few polychaetes were dislodged at shear velocities <3 cm/s on any substrate. Above this level of shear, probability of dislodgement was strongly affected by both substrate type and velocity. After accounting for substrate, odds of dislodgement were 8× greater at the higher flow. After accounting for velocity, probability of dislodgement was greatest from fine sediments, intermediate from rock faces, and negligible from Cladophora. Survivorship of dislodged polychaetes was high. Polychaetes exhibited a variety of behaviors for avoiding increases in flow, including extrusion of mucus, burrowing into sediments, and movement to lower-flow microhabitats. Our findings suggest that polychaete populations probably exhibit high resilience to flow-mediated disturbances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Molecular identification of cryptic species of Ceratomyxa Thélohan, 1892 (Myxosporea: Bivalvulida) including the description of eight novel species from apogonid fishes (Perciformes: Apogonidae) from Australian waters.
- Author
-
Heiniger, Holly and Adlard, Robert
- Subjects
CERATOMYXA ,MYXOSPOREA ,CARDINALFISHES ,PERCIFORMES ,RIBOSOMAL DNA ,GENETIC markers - Abstract
Ceratomyxa parasites from the gall bladders of 23 species of cardinalfishes (family Apogonidae) from Australian waters were examined for their taxonomic identity and phylogenetic relatedness. We identified 15 of the 23 apogonid fish species infected with species of Ceratomyxa. Although the majority of apogonid species harboured only a single Ceratomyxa species, four were found with multiple species of Ceratomyxa. This study describes eight novel species using a combination of morphological, small subunit ribosomal DNA (SSU rDNA) and biological characters. Six Ceratomyxa species are reported from single apogonid species, while two are reported from multiple host species. Molecular data were critical in identifying several morphologically cryptic species. However, our results suggest that SSU rDNA was not capable of distinguishing all the species present in the current study system and alternative genetic markers should be investigated in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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