Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/16445
Title: Pathology of Piscinoodinium sp. (Protozoa: Dinoflagellida), parasites of the ornamental freshwater catfishes Corydoras spp. and Brochis splendens (Pisces: Callichthyidae)
Authors: Ferraz, E.
SOMMERVILLE, CHRISTINA
Keywords: Bacterial Infection
Brochis Splendens
Corydoras
Diffuse Hyperplasia
Edema
Epithelium Hypertrophy
Focal Hyperplasia
Host Resistance
Pathogenicity
Piscinoodinium
South America
Bacteria (microorganisms)
Brochis Splendens
Callichthyidae
Corydoras
Dinophyceae
Pisces
Piscinoodinium
Protozoa
Siluridae
Issue Date: 1998
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Diseases of Aquatic Organisms
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 33, Número 1, Pags. 43-49
Abstract: Piscinoodinium sp. (Protozoa, Dinoflagellida) was commonly found on routine smears of samples of Brochis splendens and Corydoras spp. imported into Britain from South America, and on samples of the same group of fish examined at the exporters' holding facilities in Brazil. Infected fish had trophonts of different sizes on the gills and skin. In histological sections of the skin, the trophonts were found to be attached within depressions of different depths or enclosed by hyperplastic epithelial cells. Such enclosed trophonts have not previously been reported. Since some of the enclosed trophonts were dead, it was thought that enclosure was a result of the deep penetration of the trophont and the host defence mechanism. On the gills the Piscinoodinium infection was commonly associated with epithelial hypertrophy, focal and diffuse hyperplasia, oedema of the respiratory epithelium and lamellar fusion. The presence of this protozoan on different species of fish from the same shipment suggests that the infection was acquired before export. The source of infection and the stages of the export process which expose the fish to the highest risk of infection are discussed.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.3354/dao033043
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