Journal article 547 views
Histopathological survey of putative parasites and pathogens in non-native slipper limpets Crepidula fornicata
Diseases of Aquatic Organisms, Volume: 153, Pages: 69 - 79
Swansea University Authors: Emma Quinn, Sophie Malkin, Jess Bevan, Andrew Rowley, Christopher Coates, Jessica Thomas
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DOI (Published version): 10.3354/dao03722
Abstract
Two populations of the invasive slipper limpet Crepidula fornicata were sampled in Swansea Bay and Milford Haven, Wales, UK, to determine the presence of putative pathogens and parasites known to affect co-located commercially important shellfish (e.g. oysters). A multi-resource screen, including mo...
Published in: | Diseases of Aquatic Organisms |
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ISSN: | 0177-5103 1616-1580 |
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Inter-Research Science Center
2023
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa62916 |
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v2 62916 2023-03-12 Histopathological survey of putative parasites and pathogens in non-native slipper limpets Crepidula fornicata 6cb18d2ebc7cfec175374f0ff559d06b Emma Quinn Emma Quinn true false 17ff4136248e9382802ced1bc1d680e4 Sophie Malkin Sophie Malkin true false 11f13b14aed072e93e611759d9aa090f Jess Bevan Jess Bevan true false e98124f6e62b9592786899d7059e3a79 Andrew Rowley Andrew Rowley true false af160934b75bea5b8ba83d68b3d1a003 Christopher Coates Christopher Coates true false cf44490d4aff8772cf82b736998671ae Jessica Thomas Jessica Thomas true false 2023-03-12 SBI Two populations of the invasive slipper limpet Crepidula fornicata were sampled in Swansea Bay and Milford Haven, Wales, UK, to determine the presence of putative pathogens and parasites known to affect co-located commercially important shellfish (e.g. oysters). A multi-resource screen, including molecular and histological diagnoses, was used to assess 1800 individuals over 12 mo for microparasites, notably haplosporidians, microsporidians and paramyxids. Although initial PCR-based methods suggested the presence of these microparasites, there was no evidence of infection when assessed histologically, or when all PCR amplicons (n = 294) were sequenced. Whole tissue histology of 305 individuals revealed turbellarians in the lumen of the alimentary canal, in addition to unusual cells of unknown origin in the epithelial lining. In total, 6% of C. fornicata screened histologically harboured turbellarians, and approximately 33% contained the abnormal cells—so named due to their altered cytoplasm and condensed chromatin. A small number of limpets (~1%) also had pathologies in the digestive gland including tubule necrosis, haemocytic infiltration and sloughed cells in the tubule lumen. Overall, these data suggest that C. fornicata are not susceptible to substantive infections by microparasites outside of their native range, which may contribute in part to their invasion success. Journal Article Diseases of Aquatic Organisms 153 69 79 Inter-Research Science Center 0177-5103 1616-1580 Turbellarians, False positive PCR, Microparasites, Nuclear aberrations, Pathology, Sepsis 2 3 2023 2023-03-02 10.3354/dao03722 http://dx.doi.org/10.3354/dao03722 COLLEGE NANME Biosciences COLLEGE CODE SBI Swansea University Another institution paid the OA fee EU ERDF Ireland Wales Bluefish 2023-06-21T09:44:38.7480600 2023-03-12T15:48:28.6866656 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Biosciences Emma Quinn 1 Sophie Malkin 2 Jess Bevan 3 Andrew Rowley 4 Christopher Coates 5 Jessica Thomas 6 |
title |
Histopathological survey of putative parasites and pathogens in non-native slipper limpets Crepidula fornicata |
spellingShingle |
Histopathological survey of putative parasites and pathogens in non-native slipper limpets Crepidula fornicata Emma Quinn Sophie Malkin Jess Bevan Andrew Rowley Christopher Coates Jessica Thomas |
title_short |
Histopathological survey of putative parasites and pathogens in non-native slipper limpets Crepidula fornicata |
title_full |
Histopathological survey of putative parasites and pathogens in non-native slipper limpets Crepidula fornicata |
title_fullStr |
Histopathological survey of putative parasites and pathogens in non-native slipper limpets Crepidula fornicata |
title_full_unstemmed |
Histopathological survey of putative parasites and pathogens in non-native slipper limpets Crepidula fornicata |
title_sort |
Histopathological survey of putative parasites and pathogens in non-native slipper limpets Crepidula fornicata |
author_id_str_mv |
6cb18d2ebc7cfec175374f0ff559d06b 17ff4136248e9382802ced1bc1d680e4 11f13b14aed072e93e611759d9aa090f e98124f6e62b9592786899d7059e3a79 af160934b75bea5b8ba83d68b3d1a003 cf44490d4aff8772cf82b736998671ae |
author_id_fullname_str_mv |
6cb18d2ebc7cfec175374f0ff559d06b_***_Emma Quinn 17ff4136248e9382802ced1bc1d680e4_***_Sophie Malkin 11f13b14aed072e93e611759d9aa090f_***_Jess Bevan e98124f6e62b9592786899d7059e3a79_***_Andrew Rowley af160934b75bea5b8ba83d68b3d1a003_***_Christopher Coates cf44490d4aff8772cf82b736998671ae_***_Jessica Thomas |
author |
Emma Quinn Sophie Malkin Jess Bevan Andrew Rowley Christopher Coates Jessica Thomas |
author2 |
Emma Quinn Sophie Malkin Jess Bevan Andrew Rowley Christopher Coates Jessica Thomas |
format |
Journal article |
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Diseases of Aquatic Organisms |
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153 |
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69 |
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2023 |
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Swansea University |
issn |
0177-5103 1616-1580 |
doi_str_mv |
10.3354/dao03722 |
publisher |
Inter-Research Science Center |
college_str |
Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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facultyofscienceandengineering |
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Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Biosciences{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Science and Engineering{{{_:::_}}}School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Biosciences |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3354/dao03722 |
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description |
Two populations of the invasive slipper limpet Crepidula fornicata were sampled in Swansea Bay and Milford Haven, Wales, UK, to determine the presence of putative pathogens and parasites known to affect co-located commercially important shellfish (e.g. oysters). A multi-resource screen, including molecular and histological diagnoses, was used to assess 1800 individuals over 12 mo for microparasites, notably haplosporidians, microsporidians and paramyxids. Although initial PCR-based methods suggested the presence of these microparasites, there was no evidence of infection when assessed histologically, or when all PCR amplicons (n = 294) were sequenced. Whole tissue histology of 305 individuals revealed turbellarians in the lumen of the alimentary canal, in addition to unusual cells of unknown origin in the epithelial lining. In total, 6% of C. fornicata screened histologically harboured turbellarians, and approximately 33% contained the abnormal cells—so named due to their altered cytoplasm and condensed chromatin. A small number of limpets (~1%) also had pathologies in the digestive gland including tubule necrosis, haemocytic infiltration and sloughed cells in the tubule lumen. Overall, these data suggest that C. fornicata are not susceptible to substantive infections by microparasites outside of their native range, which may contribute in part to their invasion success. |
published_date |
2023-03-02T09:44:37Z |
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1769301163564335104 |
score |
11.037581 |