Haplosporidium is a genus in the order Haplosporida.[1]

Haplosporidium
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Clade: Diaphoretickes
Clade: SAR
Phylum: Cercozoa
Class: Ascetosporea
Order: Haplosporida
Family: Haplosporidiidae
Genus: Haplosporidium
Lühe, 1900

They are a group of eukaryotes that are parasites of marine invertebrates, causing multiple disease which has high mortality to its host, including the notorious disease MSX, which caused massive oyster mortalities in Delaware Bay in 1957 and two years later in Chesapeake Bay.

There are four genera under order Haplosporida, according to the Hand book of the Protists(2017), The principal characteristics of this genus are spores with an apical-hinged operculum and a variety of extensions externally (tails, filaments, extensions, wrapping, folds, and epispore extensions) formed by the same material of the spore wall. The number of ornaments is variable according to the different species. The internal uninucleated endosporoplasm contains a spherulosome (structure formerly designated by the name “spherule”), generally located at the apical region of the spore, several haplosporosomes, and mitochondria.

Species edit

Disease edit

MSX(Multinucleated Sphere Unknown) is the disease caused by Haplosporidium nelsoni, MSX is lethal to the eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica), The early MSX infections are found in the oyster’s gill. The infection spreads to the digestive diverticulum, and finally all the tissues of the oyster are filled with plasmodia. MSX infection is not directly transmissible from oyster to oyster. How the infection is transmitted is not yet known. Several researchers believe that an intermediate host is part of the life cycle of this parasite, but what the host is remains unknown. MSX disease is suppressed by low salinities and low temperatures.

References edit

  1. ^ WoRMS (2021). Haplosporidium Lühe, 1900. Accessed at: http://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=391857 on 2021-12-28

Citations edit

1. John M. ArchibaldAlastair G.B. SimpsonClaudio H. Slamovits(2017). Handbook of the Protists.

2.Inke Sunila, State Shellfish Pathologist. Connecticut Department of Agriculture Bureau of Aquaculture and Laboratory Milford, Connecticut 06460. MSX DISEASE

3.Gaetano Catanese, Amalia Grau, Jose Maria Valencia, Jose Rafael Garcia-March, Maite Vázquez-Luis, Elvira Alvarez, Salud Deudero, Susana Darriba, María J. Carballal, Antonio Villalba.(2018). Haplosporidium pinnae sp. nov., a haplosporidan parasite associated with mass mortalities of the fan mussel, Pinna nobilis, in the Western Mediterranean Sea.

Other sources edit

1.Isabelle Arzul, Ryan B. Carnegie.(2015) New perspective on the haplosporidan parasites of molluscs https://www.researchgate.net/publication/280998012_New_Perspective_On_The_Haplosporidian_Parasites_Of_Molluscs