Lovy Jan, Friend Sarah E
New Jersey Division of Fish & Wildlife, Office of Fish & Wildlife Health & Forensics, 605 Pequest Road, Oxford, NJ 07863, USA.
Int J Parasitol Parasites Wildl. 2015 Feb 28;4(2):159-70. doi: 10.1016/j.ijppaw.2015.02.003. eCollection 2015 Aug.
Anadromous alewives, Alosa pseudoharengus, have experienced significant population level declines caused by factors including habitat destruction. Alewives occur in two different life histories, anadromous and landlocked forms. The landlocked alewife evolved from ancestral anadromous populations, resulting in an exclusively freshwater and phenotypically unique form. The occurrence of parasites in a host is linked to the environment, making alewives an ideal model to compare parasitology within a single species with contrasting life histories. Currently, little information exists on the presence and impacts of parasites in these fish populations; the present study sets out to better understand coccidiosis in the threatened anadromous populations and to understand how coccidian parasites compare in both life history forms. The intestinal coccidian, Goussia ameliae n. sp., was described infecting the pyloric cecum of 76% and 86% of young-of-the-year and adult anadromous alewives, respectively, from the Maurice River, New Jersey, USA. The coccidian was found in landlocked alewife populations with a prevalence of 92% and 34% in YOY and adult fish, respectively. An analysis of the small subunit 18S ribosomal RNA gene of G. ameliae from both life history forms demonstrated that the coccidian had 100% sequence identity, confirming the same parasite species in both forms. Though genetic analysis demonstrated G. ameliae to be identical, some differences were observed in sporulation and morphology of the parasite within the two populations. The sporocysts in anadromous populations were shorter and wider, and sporulation timing differed from that of landlocked fish. These differences may either be attributed to differences in the host type or to the sporulation environment. Lastly, alewives from landlocked populations were frequently co-infected with a second coccidian species in the posterior intestine, which occurred at a lower prevalence. This species, G. alosii n. sp., was described based on morphological characters of the sporulated oocysts in fresh parasitological preparations.
溯河洄游的美洲西鲱(Alosa pseudoharengus)因包括栖息地破坏在内的多种因素,其种群数量大幅下降。美洲西鲱有两种不同的生活史形式,即溯河洄游型和陆封型。陆封型美洲西鲱由祖先溯河洄游种群进化而来,形成了完全淡水且表型独特的形态。宿主中寄生虫的出现与环境有关,这使得美洲西鲱成为比较具有不同生活史的单一物种内寄生虫学的理想模型。目前,关于这些鱼类种群中寄生虫的存在和影响的信息很少;本研究旨在更好地了解受威胁的溯河洄游种群中的球虫病,并了解球虫寄生虫在两种生活史形式中的差异。肠道球虫,新种阿梅利亚古氏球虫(Goussia ameliae n. sp.),在美国新泽西州莫里斯河的当年幼鱼和成年溯河洄游美洲西鲱中,分别有76%和86%的个体感染幽门盲囊。在陆封型美洲西鲱种群中也发现了这种球虫,当年幼鱼和成年鱼的感染率分别为92%和34%。对两种生活史形式的阿梅利亚古氏球虫的小亚基18S核糖体RNA基因进行分析表明,该球虫的序列同一性为100%,证实两种形式中的寄生虫为同一物种。尽管遗传分析表明阿梅利亚古氏球虫是相同的,但在两个种群中观察到该寄生虫在孢子形成和形态上存在一些差异。溯河洄游种群中的孢子囊更短更宽,孢子形成时间与陆封型鱼类不同。这些差异可能归因于宿主类型的差异或孢子形成环境的差异。最后,陆封型种群的美洲西鲱后肠中经常同时感染另一种球虫,其感染率较低。该物种,新种阿洛西古氏球虫(G. alosii n. sp.),是根据新鲜寄生虫学制剂中孢子化卵囊的形态特征描述的。