Labyrinthuloides haliotidis n.sp. (Protozoa: Labyrinthomorpha), a pathogenic parasite of small juvenile abalone in a British Columbia mariculture facility
- 1 August 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Zoology
- Vol. 65 (8) , 1996-2007
- https://doi.org/10.1139/z87-304
Abstract
Labryrinthuloides haliotidis n. sp. is an achlorophyllous eucaryotic protist that is pathogenic to juvenile abalone (Haliotis kamtschatkana and Haliotis rufescens) less than 190 days of age (postsetting). Within the muscle and nervous tissue of the head and foot of susceptible abalone and in axenic nutrient culture media at 10.degree. C, vegetative stages of L. haliotidis proliferated by binary fission and produced ectoplasmic nets from sagenogenetosomes located on the cell periphery. When the abalone died and the parasites were released from the decaying tissue or when culture forms were washed free of nutrient medium and placed in sea water, internal multiple fission (sporulation) occurred within some cells, producing zoosporoblasts. After 24 to 72 h of incubation of 10.degree. C, the zoosporoblasts ruptured to release from 3 to about 10 infective biflagellated zoospores. After about 24 h of active swimming, or on contact with a glass surface, the zoospores shed their flagella. Ultrastructure of vegetative stages and zoospores related this species more closely to the thraustochytrids than to the labyrinthulids. Confusion still prevails concerning the higher taxonomic affinities of this group of organisms. In keeping with recent publications on the taxonomy of the kingdom Protozoa, L. haliotidis was considered to be a protozoan of the phylum Labyrinthomorpha and not allied with the fungi.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Labyrinthuloides haliotidis n.sp. (Protozoa: Labyrinthomorpha), a pathogenic parasite of small juvenile abalone in a British Columbia mariculture facilityCanadian Journal of Zoology, 1987
- An ultrastructural study of taxonomically significant characters of the Thraustochytriales and the LabyrinthulalesBotanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 1985
- Ultrastructural Observations on a Thraustochytrid Fungus Parasitic in the Gills of Squid (Illex illecebrosus LeSueur)Journal of Parasitology, 1983
- The Yellow-Spot Disease of Tritonia diomedea Bergh, 1894 (Mollusca: Gastropoda: Nudibranchia): Encapsulation of the Thraustochytriaceous Parasite by Host AmoebocytesJournal of Parasitology, 1982
- A Newly Revised Classification of the Protozoa*The Journal of Protozoology, 1980
- The Fine Structure of the Slimeways in LabyrinthulaThe Journal of Protozoology, 1966
- Development and Nutrition of New Species of ThraustochytriumAmerican Journal of Botany, 1963
- Labyrinthula minuta sp.nov.Journal of General Microbiology, 1957