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Microsporidia in aquatic microcrustacea: The copepod microsporidium Marssoniella elegans Lemmermann, 1900 revisited

Publication at Faculty of Science, First Faculty of Medicine, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Central Library of Charles University |
2005

Abstract

Molecular phylogeny and revision of biology of aquatic mikrosporidium Marssoniella elegans Lemmermann, 1900.

Marssoniella elegans Lemmermann, 1900, a parasite of ovarial tissues of the copepod Cyclops vicinus Uljanin, 1875, was studied as a representative of aquatic-clade microsporidia which form "heteroinfectious spores" (spores not infective to the original host as opposed to "homoinfectious spores" which are infective for the original host) and which thus should require an alternate host. Several structural characters of this microsporidian are similar to those of copepod morphs of microsporidia infecting mosquitoes. However, small subunit ribosomal DNA phylogeny indicates that caddis flies (Insecta, Trichoptera) might be the alternate hosts of Marssoniella. Ultrastructural data obtained are used to redefine the genus Marssoniella Lemmermann, 1900 and its type species Marssoniella elegans.