Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-01T10:33:04.115Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Sphaerospora molnari sp.nov. (Myxozoa:Myxosporea), an agent of gill, skin and blood sphaerosporosis of common carp in Europe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

Jiří Lom
Affiliation:
Institute of Parasitology, Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, Flemingovo n.2, 166 32 Prague 6
Iva Dyková
Affiliation:
Institute of Parasitology, Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, Flemingovo n.2, 166 32 Prague 6
Milena Pavlásková
Affiliation:
Institute of Parasitology, Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, Flemingovo n.2, 166 32 Prague 6
Ginka Grupcheva
Affiliation:
Institute of Zoology, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia

Summary

Sphaerospora molnari sp.nov. is described from the gills, skin and nasal pits of yearling carp (Cyprinus carpio L.) from ponds in the South Bohemian pond region of Czechoslovakia and one infected specimen from the river Danube in Bulgaria. Small vegetative stages, often massively pervading the infected tissue, produce 1 spore each. Spores are sub-spherical, 10·3 × 10·5 μm in size, with almost spherical polar capsules of equal size. The polar filaments are wound in wide coils that are almost parallel with the longitudinal axis of the spore. There are 2 uninucleate sporoplasm cells. Developmental stages and spores are also found in circulating blood. In the gills, S. molnari invades stratified epithelium of gill filaments and secondary lamellae causing branchial lesions and must be regarded as a serious pathogen of yearling carp. A new name, Sphaerospora chinensis sp.nov. is proposed for S. branchialis Lee & Nie in Chen (1973), pre-occupied by S. branchialis Razmashkin and Skrip-chenko, 1967.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1983

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Chen Chih, L. (1973). An Illustrated Guide to the Fish Diseases and Causative Pathogenic Fauna and Flora in the Hubei Province. pp. 456. Peking: Science Press.Google Scholar
Csaba, G. (1976). An unidentifiable extracellular sporozoan parasite from the blood of the carp. Parasitologia Hungarica 9, 21–4.Google Scholar
Dyková, I. & Lom, J. (1982). Sphaerospora renicola n.sp., a myxosporean from carp kidney and its pathogenicity. Zeitschrift für Parasitenkunde 68, 259–68.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fujita, T. (1912). Notes on new sporozoan parasites of fishes. Zoologischer Anzeiger 39, 259–62.Google Scholar
Grassé, P.-P. & Lavette, A. (1978). La myxosporidie Sphaeromyxa sabrazesi et le nouvel embranchement des Myxozoaires (Myxozoa). Recherches sur l'état pluricellulaire primitif et considérations phylogénétiques. Annates des Science Naturelles, Zoologie 20, 193285.Google Scholar
Hámory, G. & Molnár, K. (1972). Egysejtü paraziták okozta ivadékbetegségek tógazdaságok-ban. Magyar Állatorvosok Lapja 27, 358–60.Google Scholar
Kashkovsky, V. V. (1965). Changes in the parasitofauna of fishes in Priklinsk lake in the course of a three-year period (1961–1963). Simpozium po boleznyam i parazitam ryb v vodokhranilish-chakh.Moskva, Leningrad;‘Nauka’, 12–13. (In Russian.)Google Scholar
Kovács-Gayer, E., Csaba, G., Békési, L., Bucsek, M., Szakolczai, J. & Molnár, K. (1982). A pontyivadék úszóhólyag-gyulladásának protozon-etiológiájára vonatkozó vizsgálatok. Magyar Állatorvosok Lapja 37, 405–6.Google Scholar
Kudo, R. (1919). Studies on Myxosporidia. Illinois Biological Monographs 5, no. 3 + 4, pp. 265.Google Scholar
Lom, J. & Dyková, I. (1980). Myxosporidózy a rozvoj rybnični produkce kapra. Veterinářstvi 30, 176–7.Google Scholar
Lom, J. & Dyková, I. (1983). Pathogenicity of some protozoan parasites of cyprinid fishes. Biologica Hungarica. (in the Press).Google Scholar
Lom, J., Dyková, I. & Lhotáková, Š. (1983). Fine structure of Sphaerospora renicola Dyková and Lom, 1983, a myxosporean from carp kidney and comments on the origin of pansporoblasts. Protistologica, (in the Press).Google Scholar
Molnár, K. (1978). Gill sphaerosporosis of pond fishes. 4th International Congress of Parasitology,19–26 August 1978, Warszawa. Short Communications, section C, 201–2.Google Scholar
Molnár, K. (1979). Gill sphaerosporosis in the common carp and grasscarp. Acta Veterinaria Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 27, 99113.Google Scholar
Molnár, K. (1980 a). Cutaneous sphaerosporosis of the common carp fry. Acta Veterinaria Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 28, 371–4.Google Scholar
Molnár, K. (1980 b). ‘Sphaerosporosis’, a new kidney disease of the common carp. In Fish Diseases (ed. Ahne, W.), pp. 157164. Berlin, Heidelberg and New York: Springer-Verlag.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Razmashkin, D. A. & Skripchenko, E. G. (1967). Fish diseases in pond fish husbandries of Western Siberia and Ural. Ozernoe i prudovoe khozyaístvo v Sibiri i na Urate. Tyumen, USSR. 25–7. (In Russian.)Google Scholar
Shulman, S. S. (1966). Myxosporidia of the Fauna of the USSR. Moskva-Leningrad: ‘Nauka’. pp 504. (In Russian.)Google Scholar
Thélohan, P. (1895). Recherches sur les Myxosporidies. Bulletin Scieniifique de la France et Belgique 26, 100294.Google Scholar