Ten new types of sphaeractinomyxon actinospores are morphologically and molecularly described from the coelomic cavity of two marine oligochaete hosts, Hrabě, 1967 and Tubificoides pseudogaster (Dahl, 1960), from Aveiro 2 estuary, Portugal. The smallest sphaeractinomyxon type measured 17 µm (length) × 19 µm (width) × 19 µm (apical diameter), whereas the largest type measured 61 µm × 76 µm × 80 µm. While considering the ten types of sphaeractinomyxon, it was found that the number of spores developing inside pansporocysts varied between one, two, four and eight. The total prevalence of infection was of 19% for the two host species, with a maximum recorded for spring and summer (25-26%). While considering each type of sphaeractinomyxon individually, it was found that the prevalence values ranged between 0.3 and 1.7%. All described sphaeractinomyxons were most similar to mugilids infecting Myxobolus species.
Limnodriloides agnesThe validity of the tetraspora and endocapsa collective group names is discussed.
A new microsporidian that infects the lizardfish Saurida undosquamis (Richardson, 1848) that are caught in the Arabian Gulf in Saudi Arabia is described here. This parasite invades the skeletal muscle of the abdominal cavity forming white, cyst-like structures containing numerous spores. The prevalence of the infection was 32·1% (135/420). The spores were oval to pyriform in shape and measured approximately 3·3 μm×2·0 μm. The developing spores were found within parasitophorous vacuoles. In mature spores, the polar filament was arranged into 5 coils in a row. Molecular analysis of the rRNA genes, including the ITS region, and phylogenetic analyses using maximum parsimony, maximum likelihood, and Bayesian inference were performed. The ultrastructural characteristics and phylogenetic analyses support the recognition of a new species, herein named Heterosporis saurida n. sp.
Light and electron microscopy studies of a myxosporean, parasitic in the intertubular interstitial tissue of the kidney of the freshwater teleost fish Metynnis maculatus Kner, 1860 (Characidae) from the lower Amazon River (Brazil), are described. We observed polysporic histozoic plasmodia delimited by a double membrane and with several pinocytic channels and containing several life cycle stages, including mature spores. The spore body was of pyriform shape and was 21.0 µm long, 8.9 µm wide and 7.5 µm thick. Elongated-pyriform polar capsules were of equal size (12.7 × 3.2 µm) and contained a polar filament with 14 or 15 coils. The spore features fit those of the genus Myxobolus. Densification of the capsular primordium matrix, which increased in density from the inner core outwards, differentiating at the periphery into small microfilaments measuring 45 nm each, and tubuli arranged in aggregates and dispersed within the capsular matrix of the mature spores, are described. Based on the morphological differences and specificity of the host, we propose the creation of a new species named Myxobolus maculatus n. sp.
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