| Literature DB >> 31061792 |
Anja Reckendorf1, Peter Wohlsein2, Jan Lakemeyer1, Iben Stokholm1, Vivica von Vietinghoff3, Kristina Lehnert1.
Abstract
The nasal mite Halarachne halichoeri (Acari; Halarachnidae) is adapted to live in the marine environment with pinnipeds as its primary host and can cause different levels of upper respiratory disease in both harbour seals (Phoca vitulina) and grey seals (Halichoerus grypus). Historical reports of H. halichoeri occurring in seals from German waters date back to the end of the 19th century. However, with the disappearance of the grey seal from German waters as a consequence of human over-exploitation, the mite vanished from the records and the fauna found in Germany for more than a century. Although a stranding network has been monitoring marine mammal health along the German coasts since the mid 1980s with extensive post-mortem investigations, this study reports the first and subsequent findings of H. halichoeri in grey and harbour seals from the North and Baltic Sea from 2014 onwards. The re-emergence of this endoparasitic mite in North and Baltic Sea habitats seems to have occurred simultaneously with the recolonisation of its primary host, the grey seal. During the course of its recolonisation, it was probably transmitted to harbour seals sharing the same haul-out sites. Molecular analyses showed a high similarity of rDNA sequences with H. halichoeri collected from sea otters (Enhydra lutris) in the USA. However, more thorough analyses of additional gene loci are required to fully assess the exchange and diversity of this parasite between geographically isolated regions and species.Entities:
Keywords: Acari; Coevolution; Endoparasitic mite; Halichoerus grypus; Pinnipeds; Recolonisation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31061792 PMCID: PMC6487302 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijppaw.2019.04.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Parasitol Parasites Wildl ISSN: 2213-2244 Impact factor: 2.674
Background information of harbour and grey seals infected with Halarachne halichoeri from the North and Baltic Sea, including general pathological findings (n. a. = not assessed due to advanced decomposition).
| Species ID | Date of death/discovery | Age | Sex | Origin | Observations | Number of nasal mites | Pathology |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11.02.2014 | adult | ♀ | Baltic Sea. Binz, Island of Ruegen | found dead | >60 adults, few larvae | Severe alveolar and interstitial oedema; multifocal moderate interstitial emphysema; multifocal ulcerative enterocolitis with acanthocephalans | |
| 26.07.2015 | adult | ♀ | North Sea. Hoernum, Island of Sylt | emaciated, apathetic, mild diarrhoea, respiratory distress, coughing, unilateral bleeding from one nostril | ∼30 larvae, ∼6 adults | Severe suppurative bronchopneumonia; moderate alveolar/interstitial oedema, moderate alveolar emphysema; severe granulomatous gastritis | |
| 13.02.2016 | adult | ♂ | Baltic Sea. Sierksdorf, Bay of Luebeck | apathetic, poor nutritional status, respiratory distress | Multiple adults & larvae | Mild alveolar oedema; severe interstitial emphysema; amyloidosis in kidney, stomach, pancreas, adrenal glands | |
| 31.07.2018 | adult | ♀ | North Sea. Brunsbuettel | apathetic, respiratory distress, coughing | Multiple adults & larvae | Severe suppurative bronchopneumonia; moderate granulomatous and eosinophilic mural gastritis with intralesional nematodes | |
| 17.08.2015 | juvenile | ♂ | Baltic Sea. Gelting Bay | found dead | One decaying adult | n. a. | |
| 13.10.2015 | yearling | ♀ | North Sea. Helgoland island | found dead | Five adults | Severe pulmonary endoparasitosis (nematodes); multifocal suppurative pneumonia; severe alveolar/interstitial oedema and emphysema; moderate granulomatous and eosinophilic lymphadenitis (mesenterial) |
Fig. 1Macroscopic image of in situ nasal mites within the caudal nares of H.g. 3, ventrodorsal view, animal lying on its back. Scale bar approximately 1 cm.
Fig. 2Dark field binocular image of Halarachne halichoeri adult ventral and dorsal view (A) from H.g. 2 in comparison with (B) CeNak museum specimen from 1890.
Fig. 3Dark field binocular image of Halarachne halichoeri larvae ventral and dorsal view (A) from H.g. 2 in comparison with (B) CeNak museum specimen from 1890.
Fig. 4Grey seal, nasal mucosa with severe, diffuse lympho-plasmacytic infiltration; HE; E = epithelium; bar = 100 μm.
Fig. 5Grey seal, nasal cavity with intraluminal mites (arrows) and severe, diffuse inflammatory infiltration of the mucosa (asterisks); HE; C = cartilage; bar = 250 μm.
Fig. 6Polyp-like growths with adult mites present. Tissue extracted from H.g. 4's inferior nasal meatus adjacent to the hard palate.