Nereis pelagica, (L.), Linnaeus, 1758
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1007/s00436-011-2471-8 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11579874 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CC87BB-BF34-0D20-1726-8955929DFA78 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Nereis pelagica |
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Description of actinospores from N. pelagica View in CoL
All actinospores were of the tetractinomyxon type ( Fig. 3 View Fig ). They all occurred free in the decaying polychaete body. No pansporocysts were found. The thick-walled actinospores were spherical to slightly ellipsoidal, length 7.0–8.0 (mean 7.6; n =10) and diameter 6.0–7.5 (6.7). The actinospores were composed of eight cells most easily identified by the presence of their nuclei; the three nuclei of the shell valve cells appeared as small thickenings internally on the spore wall, the three nuclei of the polar capsules and the two nuclei of the sporoplasm. The diameter of the three identical spherical polar capsules was 2.0–2.3 (2.1). It was not possible to provoke extrusion of the polar filaments.
SSU rDNA sequences
Partial SSU rDNA sequences were obtained from M. sphaericum -infected gall bladders of two B. belone from Denmark (sequence isolates SigBel-1 and 2, GenBank accession nos. JN033225, JN033226) and the studied infection from Norway (sequence isolate Msph, JN033227). These were identical (1696 nt compared).
Two different parts of a N. pelagica infected with tetractinomyxon actinospores produced two identical partial SSU sequences (sequence isolates Npel 1 and 2, JN033228) (1696 nt compared). These sequences were identical with the M. sphaericum sequences from B. belone , apart for four substitutions (99.8 % identity, 1696 nt compared). On this basis the actinosporean infection in N. pelagica is identified with the myxosporean M. sphaericum infecting B. belone .
Blast searches returned Ellipsomyxa spp. as most similar to the partial M. sphaericum SSU rDNA sequences. Phylogenetic analyses on the basis of the SSU rDNA sequences supported a close relationship between genus Ellipsomyxa and M. sphaericum ( Fig. 4 View Fig ). Myxidium queenslandicus Gunter and Adlard, 2008 represent a sister group to Ellipsomyxa spp. / M. sphaericum in these analyses ( Fig. 4 View Fig ). The congeneric marine clade members M. laticurvum , Myxidium incurvatum Thélohan, 1892 Myxidium gadi Georgévitch, 1916 and M. bergense are not closely related to M. sphaericum ( Fig. 4 View Fig ). A schematic illustration of the life cycle of Sigmomyxa sphaerica (syn. M. sphaericum , see below) is shown in Fig. 5 View Fig .
SSU |
Saratov State University |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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