1. Myxozoan parasites disseminated via oligochaete worms as live food for aquarium fishes: descriptions of aurantiactinomyxon and raabeia actinospore types.
- Author
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Hallett SL, Atkinson SD, Erséus C, and El-Matbouli M
- Subjects
- Animals, Base Sequence, DNA, Protozoan chemistry, Eukaryota genetics, Fishes, Life Cycle Stages genetics, Molecular Sequence Data, RNA, Ribosomal, 18S genetics, Sequence Alignment, Spores, Protozoan classification, Spores, Protozoan isolation & purification, Animal Feed parasitology, Eukaryota classification, Eukaryota isolation & purification, Oligochaeta parasitology
- Abstract
A total of 7 samples of live freshwater oligochaetes (mixed species), sold as 'tubifex' worms as food for aquarium fishes, were purchased over a 1 yr period from several pet shops in Munich, Germany, and screened for parasitic infections of myxozoans. The water associated with 5 samples contained actinospores at the time of purchase; 6 samples subsequently released spores in the laboratory. In all, 12 types of actinospores (Myxozoa: Myxosporea) from 4 collective groups were released by the oligochaetes. In the current study we provide descriptions of 2 aurantiactinomyxons (Myxobolus intimus Zaika, 1965 and type 1 nov.) and 3 raabeias (type 1 and 2 nov., Raabeia type 1 of Oumouna et al., 2003); descriptions of the 5 triactinomyxon and 2 hexactinomyxon types have been published previously. We include both raabeia and echinactinomyxon types in differential diagnoses of our raabeia forms because a clear distinction between these groups no longer exists in the literature. Comparison of 18S rDNA sequence data revealed that 1 of the novel aurantiactinomyxons was Myxobolus intimus. The sale of worms hundreds of km away from their point of origin is a means of dissemination of myxozoan parasites.
- Published
- 2006
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