4.2 Article

Ellipsomyxa ariusi sp. nov. (Myxosporea: Ceratomyxidae), a new myxosporean infecting the gallbladder of threadfin sea catfish Arius arius in India

Journal

DISEASES OF AQUATIC ORGANISMS
Volume 142, Issue -, Pages 83-97

Publisher

INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/dao03529

Keywords

Myxospores; Gallbladder; Molecular phylogeny; Seasonality; Histopathology; Myxozoa

Funding

  1. Council of Scientific & Industrial Research, New Delhi [09/1135(0001)/2015-EMR-I]

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The present study describes a new species of myxosporean, Ellipsomyxa ariusi sp. nov., infecting the gallbladder of the threadfin sea catfish Arius arius (Hamilton, 1822). E. ariusi sp. nov. is characterized by bivalvular, ellipsoid or elongate-oval myxospores with smooth spore valves and a straight suture, arranged at an angle to the longitudinal spore axis. Mature myxospores measured 10.1 +/- 0.8 mu m in length, 6.8 +/- 0.5 mu m in width and 7.7 +/- 0.7 mu m in thickness. Polar capsules are equal in size and oval to pyriform in shape. They are positioned at an angle to the longitudinal myxospore axis and open in opposite directions. Polar capsules measured 2.8 +/- 0.3 mu m in length and 2.5 +/- 0.4 mu m in width; polar filaments formed 4-5 coils, and extended to 32.2 +/- 2.1 mu m in length. Monosporic and disporic plasmodial stages attached to the wall of gallbladder. Molecular analysis of the type specimen generated a 1703 bp partial SSU rDNA sequence (MN892546), which was identical to the isolates from 3 other locations. In phylogenetic analyses, genus Ellipsomyxa appeared monophyletic and E. ariusi sp. nov. occupied an independent position in maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference trees with high bootstrap values. The overall prevalence of infection was 54.8% and multiway ANOVA revealed that it varied significantly with location, year, season, sex and size of the fish host. Histopathological changes associated with E. ariusi sp. nov. infection included swelling, vacuolation and detachment of epithelial layer, reduced mucus production and altered consistency and colour of bile. Based on the morphologic, morphometric and molecular differences with known species of Ellipsomyxa, and considering differences in host and geographic locations, the present species is treated as new and the name Ellipsomyxa ariusi sp. nov. is proposed.

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