Category
| Common Name | Scientific Name | Distribution | Host SpeciesCategory 3 (Host Not in Canada)
Various unidentified protistan parasites of pearl oysters.
a) Unidentified protistan parasite possibly a sprorozoan in digestive
gland tubules.
b) Unidentified protistan parasite possibly a Thraustochytridea in connective tissue under surface lesions of the palps and mantle.
c) Unidentified protistan parasite possibly a ciliate attached to digestive gland epithelial cells.
d) Intracellular ciliate in the epithelial cells of the digestive gland
similar to that described from mussels but
the relationship to these organisms in mussels from the northern hemisphere is
unknown.
Western Australia.
Pinctada maxima.
a) Putative sporoblasts develop within the epithelial cells of the
digestive gland and fill the lumen of the tubules. Associated with a
basophilic haemocyte infiltration. Prevalence of less than 0.005% has limited
further investigations into this parasite (Jones and Creeper 2006).
b) The thraustochytrid-like parasite was identified in moribund, gaping
P.
maxima from a farm that had experienced losses after a cyanobacterial
bloom. Affected oysters showed extensive necrosis of the epithelium lining the
palps and mantle with invasion of the underlying connective (leydig) tissues
by brown pigmented and eosinophilic , segmented unicellular organisms and
smaller dense basophilic cells.
c) A large elongate ciliate-like organism intimately associated with the
digestive tract epithelium to which it appears to have a sessile attachment.
The tubule epithelium below the site of attachment consisted of a small focal
patch of multinucleate host cells. The prevalence of infection was low in P. maxima from the Exmouth Gulf, Western Australia.
d) The intracellular ciliate is often associated with haemocyte infiltration
in P. maxima less that 70 mm shell length. In smaller pearl oyster spat
(20-40 mm in shell length) the ciliate can penetrate the mucosal basal lamina
and reside within the haemolymph sinuses or free within the interstitial
connective tissue. This ciliate has only been detected in pearl oyster spat
from the Exmouth Gulf, and outlying islands of Western Australia since 2001.
Histology: a) Putative sporoblasts (about 20 µm in diameter) occur within the epithelium and lumen of digestive gland tubules and gut. Haemocyte infiltration into the connective tissues between the tubules was associated with infection (Fig. 1).
b) The brown pigmented and eosinophilic, segmented unicellular organisms (10 to 15 µm in diameter) and smaller dense basophilic cells (5 µm in diameter) within the connective tissue of the palps and mantle seem to be embedded in a mucinous matrix (Fig. 2).
c) A large elongate ciliate-like organism (30 µm by 20 µm) attached to the epithelium of the digestive gland tubule associated with hyperplasia of the tubule nuclei at the site of attachment (Fig. 3).
d) Teardrop shaped basophilic ciliate (10 to 15 µm long by about 5 µm wide) with a macronucleus containing dense basophilic spheres. This ciliate normally occupies an intraluminal or intraepithelial location within the digestive gland tubule of spat (Fig. 4).
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Figure 4. Intracellular ciliates (arrows) in the
epithelial cells of a digestive gland tubule of
Pinctada maxima. Haematoxylin and eosin
stain. |
No known methods of prevention or control.
Jones, J.B. and J. Creeper. 2006. Diseases of pearl oysters and other molluscs: a Western Australian perspective. Journal of Shellfish Research 25: 233-238.
Bower, S.M., Jones J.B. (2007): Synopsis of Infectious Diseases and Parasites of Commercially Exploited Shellfish: Unidentified Protistan Parasites of Pearl Oysters.
URL: http://www.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/science/species-especes/shellfish-coquillages/diseases-maladies/pages/unidprotoy-eng.htm
Date last revised: May 2007
Comments to
Susan Bower