Literature DB >> 15212283

Prevalence of parasites in amphipods Diporeia spp. from Lakes Michigan and Huron, USA.

Gretchen A Messick1, Robin M Overstreet, Thomas F Nalepa, Sue Tyler.   

Abstract

Amphipods of Diporeia spp. have declined considerably during the last decade in the Great Lakes. We examined the possibility that disease may be affecting these populations. A histological survey assessed the parasites in species of Diporeia within Lakes Huron and Michigan, USA, and the host response to some of them and to unknown factors. Amphipods were found to have an intranuclear inclusion body, and were hosts to a rickettsia-like organism, fungi, a haplosporidian, a microsporidian, epibiotic ciliates, a gregarine, a cestode, acanthocephalans and nodule formations. Epibiotic ciliates were most common (37% prevalence of infection), but a microsporidian (3.8%), a rickettsia-like organism (1.6%), fungi, including a yeast-like organism (1.3%), worms (1.3%), and a haplosporidian (0.7%) are likely associated with mortalities or detrimental effects on the host. The role these agents may have played in the decline of Diporeia spp. in the Great Lakes over the last decade is not clear. Interrelationships with the dynamics of various physical and biological factors such as high sedimentation, diminished food supplies, and virulent parasites could synergistically cause the decline in Diporeia spp. populations in Lakes Michigan and Huron.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15212283     DOI: 10.3354/dao059159

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dis Aquat Organ        ISSN: 0177-5103            Impact factor:   1.802


  2 in total

1.  Molecular and ultrastructural characterization of Haplosporidium diporeiae n. sp., a parasite of Diporeia sp. (Amphipoda, Gammaridea) in the Laurentian Great Lakes (USA).

Authors:  Andrew D Winters; Mohamed Faisal
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2014-07-24       Impact factor: 3.876

2.  Widespread Torix Rickettsia in New Zealand amphipods and the use of blocking primers to rescue host COI sequences.

Authors:  Eunji Park; Robert Poulin
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-10-08       Impact factor: 4.379

  2 in total

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