Parvicapsula petuniae, Kodádková & Dyková & Tyml & Ditrich & Fiala, 2014
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.ijppaw.2014.02.001 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0382C854-FFAB-E81D-DC3E-FEE2EB363680 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Parvicapsula petuniae |
status |
sp. nov. |
Parvicapsula petuniae View in CoL n. sp. ( Fig. 1D View Fig , Fig. 7 View Fig ).
Family Parvicapsulidae Shulman, 1953 .
Genus Parvicapsula Shulman, 1953 .
Type host: G. tricuspis (Reinhardt, 1830) , Arctic staghorn sculpin; average standard length 13.9 cm.
Other hosts: unknown.
Type locality: Greenland Sea , part of the Billefjorden , Isfjorden, Petunia Bay in the central part of Svalbard archipelago (78° 69 Ɩ N, 16° 53 Ɩ E) .
Other localities: none.
Description of sporogonic stages: disporic plasmodia, early plasmodia subspherical to oval, sometimes with filopodial projections; plasmodia located in renal tubules; for dimensions see Table 1.
Description of myxospores: spores asymmetrical with somewhat curved and wavy suture line, ellipsoidal in frontal view; two pyriform PCs of equal size; closely apposed, discharging in the same apical direction, 8 coils of polar filament; single distinct binucleate sporoplasm; measurements see Table 1.
Localization of sporogonic stages: coelozoic, renal tubules, urinary bladder.
Prevalence: 9% (2 of 22 kidney samples and of 17 urinary bladders).
Pathology: No material was available for evaluation the species pathogenicity.
Materials deposited: DNA sample (nr. 1423) stored in – 80 °C in the Laboratory of Fish Protistology, Institute of Parasitology, BC ASCR; SSU (GenBank accession No. KF874230) and LSU (GenBank accession No. KF874223) rDNA sequences.
Etymology: specific name refers to the type locality Petunia Bay.
Remarks: This is the first report of a Parvicapsula species from G. tricuspis . The shape and size of P. petuniae spores are similar to the asymmetrical spores of P. hoffmani infecting the intestinal epithelium of mullet ( India) ( Dorothy and Kalavati, 1993) and even more similar to P. karenii infecting the urinary bladder of a flatfish from the Yellow Sea ( Zhao et al., 2000). Nevertheless, the above mentioned morphologically similar Parvicapsula species differ in their host species preference and with different distributions from P. petuniae thus considering it to be a distinct species.
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