CLPX (Clam Protozoan Unknown) was observed in the wall of the gonad, in the musculature of the siphon, mantle and foot, and under the epithelium lining of the water channels and mantle cavity of geoduck clams. Infected geoduck clams were detected in all Fisheries Management Areas sampled but CLPX always occurred at very low prevalence and intensity of infection. Only two morphological stages have been found. Both stages are relatively large for protozoa (about 25 to 30 µm in diameter); one stage has a single large vacuole that compresses the nucleus to the periphery of the cell (Fig. 1 ), and the other stage has multiple vacuoles (Fig. 2). There was no evidence of a host reaction to their presence.
CLPX resembles an unidentified protozoan that is infrequently
observed in the Pacific littleneck clam (Protothaca staminea). Desser
and Bower (1997) speculated that this protozoan in Pacific littleneck
clams may be the early developmental stage of avermiform apicomplexan
parasite speculated to be a stage of a heteroxenous coccidian life cycle
with a predator of clams serving as the definitive host in which
gamogony and sporogony occur.
The vermiform stage of the gregarine parasite commonly found in Pacific
littleneck clams (between 70 and 100 % of the clams infected in some
populations) (Desser and Bower 1997) and rarely observed in Manila (Japanese
littleneck) clams (Venerupis (=Tapes) philippinarum) (Bower et al. 1992) has not
been found to date in geoduck clams. The vermiform stages in the littleneck
clams are zoites that have some ultrastructural similarities to merozoites of
Aggregata eberthi (class Coccidia, order Eimeriida). Although the cyst
(containing numerous closely packed zoites) in littleneck clams can be up to 150
µm in diameter, there was little evidence of a haemocytic response to infection
and no associated pathology in the Pacific littleneck clam and Manila clam
(Bower 2002).
Bower, S.M. (2002): Synopsis of Infectious Diseases and Parasites of
Commercially Exploited Shellfish: Gregarine Parasitism of Clams and Cockles.
URL:
http://www.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/science/species-especes/shellfish-coquillages/diseases-maladies/pages/gregpcc-eng.htm
Bower, S.M., J. Blackbourn and G.R. Meyer. 1992. Parasite and symbiont fauna of Japanese littlenecks, Tapes philippinarum (Adams and Reeve, 1850), in British Columbia. Journal of Shellfish Research 11: 13-19.
Desser, S.S. and S.M. Bower. 1997. The distribution, prevalence, and morphological features of the cystic stage of an apicomplexan parasite of native littleneck clams (Protothaca staminea) in British Columbia. The Journal of Parasitology 83: 642-646.
Lauckner, G. 1983. Diseases of Mollusca: Bivalvia. In: O. Kinne (ed.). Diseases of Marine Animals. Volume II: Introduction, Bivalvia to Scaphopoda. Biologische Anstalt Helgoland, Hamburg, p. 542-548.
Bower, S.M. and Blackbourn, J. (2003): Geoduck clam (Panopea abrupta): Anatomy, Histology, Development, Pathology, Parasites and Symbionts: CLPX - Clam Protozoan Unknown of Geoduck Clams.
URL: http://www.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/science/species-especes/shellfish-coquillages/geopath/clpx-eng.htm
Date last revised: March 2010
Comments to
Susan Bower