RESUMO
Phototaxis is the common behavioral response exhibited by the oncomiracidia of various monogeneans. However, the changes in the oncomiracidial swimming behavior in response to light cues are not well understood. Here, we investigated the light responses of four monogeneans that are important pathogens in mariculture, namely Benedenia epinepheli, Benedenia seriolae, Neobenedenia girellae, and Heteraxine heterocerca. The swimming trajectory and speed of oncomiracidia of each species were assessed in a glass Petri dish with an LED light placed adjacent to it, based on three different light responses: LED light in the off position (normal swimming), LED light in the on position (phototactic behavior), and immediately (< 5 s) after switching the LED light off (photophobic behavior). The oncomiracidia of all four species exhibited positive phototactic and photophobic responses; however, the change in swimming speed between each response differed among the species. The oncomiracidia of three species (B. epinepheli, N. girellae, and H. heterocerca) exhibited high swimming speed, as a phototactic response; in contrast, the oncomiracidia of B. seriolae exhibited reduced swimming speed when moving toward the light source. Benedenia epinepheli and H. heterocerca exhibited the highest swimming speed during the phototaxis phase, whereas B. seriolae and N. girellae exhibited the highest swimming speed during the photophobic phase. These light responses are considered adaptive traits to increase the chance of encountering and infecting suitable hosts in nature, and such responses could potentially be applied to the control of parasite infections in aquaculture.
Assuntos
Fototaxia , Trematódeos , Animais , Aquicultura , Trematódeos/fisiologiaRESUMO
Accurate identification of parasite species and strains is crucial to mitigate the risk of epidemics and emerging disease. Species of Neobenedenia are harmful monogenean ectoparasites that infect economically important bony fishes in aquaculture worldwide, however, the species boundaries between two of the most notorious taxa, N. melleni and N. girellae, has been a topic of contention for decades. Historically, identifications of Neobenedenia isolates have overwhelmingly been attributed to N. melleni, and it has been proposed that N. girellae is synonymous with N. melleni. We collected 33 Neobenedenia isolates from 22 host species spanning nine countries and amplified three genes including two nuclear (Histone 3 and 28S rDNA) and one mitochondrial (cytochrome b). Four major clades were identified using Maximum Likelihood and Bayesian inference analyses; clades A-D corresponding to N. girellae, N. melleni, N. longiprostata and N. pacifica, respectively. All unidentified isolates and the majority of Neobenedenia sequences from GenBank fell into clade A. The results of this study indicate that N. girellae is a separate species to N. melleni, and that a large proportion of previous samples identified as N. melleni may be erroneous and a revision of identifications is needed. The large diversity of host species that N. girellae is able to infect as determined in this study and the geographic range in which it is present (23.8426°S and 24.1426°N) makes it a globally cosmopolitan species and a threat to aquaculture industries around the world.
Assuntos
Aquicultura , Impressões Digitais de DNA , Pesqueiros , Peixes/parasitologia , Parasitos/genética , Trematódeos/genética , Animais , Sequência de Bases , Teorema de Bayes , Doenças dos Peixes/parasitologia , Especificidade de Hospedeiro , Parasitos/isolamento & purificação , Filogenia , Especificidade da Espécie , Trematódeos/classificação , Trematódeos/isolamento & purificaçãoRESUMO
Interspecific hybrids of farm-raised fish are becoming popular in aquaculture owing to their advantages over pure species, including improved growth and higher resistance to infectious diseases. Kue-Tama is a recently established hybrid grouper derived from the longtooth grouper Epinephelus bruneus (â) × giant grouper E. lanceolatus (â). In our previous study, this hybrid showed significantly higher resistance against the skin fluke Benedenia epinepheli, a problematic parasite in grouper farming, than the longtooth grouper. In the present study, we explored lectins in the skin mucus of hybrids and their parent species. While C-type lectins of approximately 15 kDa were obtained from longtooth groupers, additional C-type lectins with molecular masses of approximately 20 and 30 kDa, as well as 45-kDa F-type lectin, were also detected in Kue-Tama and giant groupers. Semi-quantitative reverse transcript-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) demonstrated that the gene expression levels of both C-type and F-type lectins were significantly higher in the skin of the hybrid and giant groupers than that of the longtooth grouper. In addition, some skin mucus lectins of the hybrid and giant groupers were bound to the fluke, suggesting that these lectins conferred resistance to parasitic infections.
Assuntos
Bass , Animais , Bass/genética , Aquicultura , Lectinas Tipo C/genéticaRESUMO
Intra-species morphological variation presents a considerable problem for species identification and can result in taxonomic confusion. This is particularly pertinent for species of Neobenedenia which are harmful agents in captive fish populations and have historically been identified almost entirely based on morphological characters. This study aimed to understand how the morphology of Neobenedenia girellae varies with host fish species and the environment. Standard morphological features of genetically indistinct parasites from various host fish species were measured under controlled temperatures and salinities. An initial field-based investigation found that parasite morphology significantly differed between genetically indistinct parasites infecting various host fish species. The majority of the morphological variation observed (60%) was attributed to features that assist in parasite attachment to the host (i.e. the posterior and anterior attachment organs and their accessory hooks) which are important characters in monogenean taxonomy. We then experimentally examined the effects of the interaction between host fish species and environmental factors (temperature and salinity) on the morphology of isogenic parasites derived from a single, isolated hermaphroditic N. girellae infecting barramundi, Lates calcarifer. Experimental infection of L. calcarifer and cobia, Rachycentron canadum, under controlled laboratory conditions did not confer host-mediated phenotypic plasticity in N. girellae, suggesting that measured morphological differences could be adaptive and only occur over multiple parasite generations. Subsequent experimental infection of a single host species, L. calcarifer, at various temperatures (22, 30 and 32⯰C) and salinities (35 and 40) showed that in the cooler environments (22⯰C) N. girellae body proportions were significantly smaller compared with warmer temperatures (30 and 32⯰C; Pâ¯<â¯0.0001), whereas salinity had no effect. This is evidence that temperature can drive phenotypic plasticity in key taxonomic characters of N. girellae under certain environmental conditions.