Infection prevalence, seasonality and host specificity of actinosporean types (Myxozoa) in an Atlantic salmon fish farm located in Northern Scotland

OZER, AHMET/0000-0002-2890-6766; Shinn, Andrew/0000-0002-5434-2685 WOS: 000180503200004 PubMed: 12641199 A total of 28,387 oligochaetes belonging to the families Tubificidae, Lumbriculidae, Naididae and Enchytraeidae were examined at regular intervals for actinosporean infections from October 1996 t...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Folia Parasitologica
Main Authors: Ozer, A, Wootten, R, Shinn, AP
Other Authors: OMÜ
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Folia Parasitologica 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12712/22090
https://doi.org/10.14411/fp.2002.050
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Summary:OZER, AHMET/0000-0002-2890-6766; Shinn, Andrew/0000-0002-5434-2685 WOS: 000180503200004 PubMed: 12641199 A total of 28,387 oligochaetes belonging to the families Tubificidae, Lumbriculidae, Naididae and Enchytraeidae were examined at regular intervals for actinosporean infections from October 1996 to August 1998 from a freshwater salmon farm in Nor-them Scotland. A total of 21 types of actinosporeans belonging to seven collective groups synactinomyxon (three types), aurantiactinomyxon (four types), echinactinomyxon (five types), raabeia (six types), triactinomyxon (one type), neoactinomyxum (one type) and siedleckiella (one type) were found. Synactinomyxon type 1, echinactinomyxon type 1 and raabeia type 4 were most abundant. The overall infection prevalence of oligochactes was 2.9%. Aurantiactinomyxon, synactinomyxon and neoactinomyxum were most common in summer and autumn. Raabeia was most common in spring and summer and echinactinomyxon in winter and spring, Siedleckiella was found only in spring and triactinomyxon in all seasons except winter. A positive relationship between water temperature and the number of actinosporean types released was observed. Most actinosporean types were found in only one host species.