1. Intracellular ciliated protozoal infection in silverlip pearl oysters, Pinctada maxima (Jameson, 1901).
- Author
-
Spiers ZB, Bearham D, Jones JB, O'Hara AJ, and Raidal SR
- Subjects
- Animals, Ciliophora pathogenicity, Ciliophora ultrastructure, Digestive System parasitology, Digestive System pathology, Hemocytes parasitology, Hemocytes pathology, Host-Parasite Interactions, Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic blood, Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic parasitology, Parasitic Diseases, Animal blood, Parasitic Diseases, Animal parasitology, Pinctada ultrastructure, Ciliophora physiology, Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic pathology, Parasitic Diseases, Animal pathology, Pinctada parasitology
- Abstract
The pathology associated with an intracellular ciliate infection in the digestive gland of pearl oysters Pinctada maxima (Jameson, 1901) is described. Histopathological and transmission electron microscopic examination were used to characterise the organism and its location within host cells. The parasite is tear-drop shaped measuring 5.53 microm (range of 2.73-7.47 microm, n=9) in width and 11.15 microm (range of 9.02-16.2 microm) in length with a centrally located lobulated nucleus and a large nucleus:cytoplasmic ratio. The ciliate has nine evenly spaced rows of cilia running obliquely along the length of cell, converging on the pointed end. Infected digestive glands typically had a moderate to severe infiltration with mononuclear hemocyte. A strong correlation existed between the burden of ciliates and the host response; (p<0.001, C=0.315 Pearson Correlation). The use of a single tissue section upon microscopic examination was found to detect only 38-50% of the infections. However, examination of serial haematoxylin and eosin stained sections improved the reliability of detecting infection.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF