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Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 16(2), 1980, pp. 233-236
© Wildlife Disease Association  1980
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Epizootiology and histopathology of Chloromyxum trijugum (Myxospora: Myxosporida) in centrarchid fishes from Iowa

LG Mitchell, JK Listebarger, and WC Bailey


ABSTRACT

The gall bladder parasite, Chloromyxum trijugum, shows marked host specificity within the sunfish family Centrarchidae. During 1977-78 80% of 230 bluegills (lepomis macrochirus) in Iowa were infected. Prevalence in green sunfish (L. cyanellus) was lower (17%); one of 2 specimens of the hybrid L. macrochirus x L. cyanellus was infected; orangespotted sunfish (L. humilis) and hybrids (L. humilis x L. macrochirus) were not infected. Intensity of infection in bluegills varied throughout the year. Prevalence of free-floating plasmodia in bluegill gall bladders was highest (100%) during winter and spring months, and decreased to 40-50% during summer and fall. Prevalence of attached plasmodia may remain 80-100% throughout the year. Sporulation and plasmotomy were observed year-round. Plasmodia were attached to underlying epithelial cells by pseudopodia-like projections and were associated with various stages of breakdown in the mucosal layer.





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Copyright © 1980 by the Wildlife Disease Association.