This document provides information on various phyla of parasites found in fish, including Platyhelminthes (cestodes and trematodes), Nematoda (nematodes), and Acanthocephala (thorny-headed worms). It describes their basic morphology, lifecycles, examples of types of parasites, and the pathology they can cause in different types of fish hosts. Common parasites discussed include tapeworms, flukes, roundworms, and spiny-headed worms.
Parasitism:
It is defined as an intimate and obligatory relationships between two heterospecific organisms during which the parasite, usually the smaller of the two partners is metabolically depended on the host.
Parasitology:
The term ‘parasitology’ is originated from Greek word- ‘Para’ means beside, ‘sitos’ means food and ‘logus’ means study.
It is the branch of science which deals with the study of the relationship between the parasite and host. This discipline includes several approaches to the study of parasitic organisms such as phylogeny, morphology, ecology, life history, physiology, chaemotherapy, serology, immunology and bio chemistry.
Fish parasitology:
It is the branch of science that deals with the study of parasite of fishes. It includes the infection and disease of fish caused by parasite.
Parasitism:
It is defined as an intimate and obligatory relationships between two heterospecific organisms during which the parasite, usually the smaller of the two partners is metabolically depended on the host.
Parasitology:
The term ‘parasitology’ is originated from Greek word- ‘Para’ means beside, ‘sitos’ means food and ‘logus’ means study.
It is the branch of science which deals with the study of the relationship between the parasite and host. This discipline includes several approaches to the study of parasitic organisms such as phylogeny, morphology, ecology, life history, physiology, chaemotherapy, serology, immunology and bio chemistry.
Fish parasitology:
It is the branch of science that deals with the study of parasite of fishes. It includes the infection and disease of fish caused by parasite.
Identification and study of important cultivable FishesDr. Karri Ramarao
In India mostly major carps are use to cultivable freshwater fish and some catfish also use to culture. The important cultivable species are Catla catla, Labeo rohita, Cirrhinus mrigalaIn India mostly major carps are use to cultivable fish and some catfish also use to culture. The important cultivable saline water species areMugils, Lates etc,.
The most common fish diseases, particularly in freshwater aquaria, include columnaris, gill disease, ick (ich), dropsy, tail and fin-rot, fungal infections, white spot disease, pop-eye, cloudy eye, swim bladder disease, lice and nematode worms infestation, water quality induced diseases, constipation, anorexia, ...
Identification and study of important cultivable FishesDr. Karri Ramarao
In India mostly major carps are use to cultivable freshwater fish and some catfish also use to culture. The important cultivable species are Catla catla, Labeo rohita, Cirrhinus mrigalaIn India mostly major carps are use to cultivable fish and some catfish also use to culture. The important cultivable saline water species areMugils, Lates etc,.
The most common fish diseases, particularly in freshwater aquaria, include columnaris, gill disease, ick (ich), dropsy, tail and fin-rot, fungal infections, white spot disease, pop-eye, cloudy eye, swim bladder disease, lice and nematode worms infestation, water quality induced diseases, constipation, anorexia, ...
Infectious pancreatic necrosis (IPN) is a severe viral disease of salmonid fish. It is caused by infectious pancreatic necrosis virus. It make huge economic loss on aquaculture industry every year.
Clinically important cestodes pathogenic to man are:
Tenia solium (pork tapeworm), T. saginata (beef tapeworm), Diphyllobothrium lattum (fish or broad tapeworm), Hymenolepis nana (dwarf tapeworm) and Echinococcus granulosus and E. multilocularis (hydatid).
Corals are marine invertebrates in class Anthozoa of phylum Cnidaria typically living in compact colonies of many identical individual "polyps".
Corals are gastrovascular marine organisms. Each one of these animals is known as a coral
"polyp". Coral Polyps are tiny, primitive marine organisms.
A single polyp has a tube-shaped body with a mouth which is surrounded by tentacles.
The polyp of hard corals produces a stony skeleton of calcium carbonate which form the base. Often the skeleton forms a cup-like structure in which the polyp lives. Coral polyps in colonies make up the cora reefs.
Introduction
Gnathostomata are the jawed vertebrates. (gnathos= "jaw" + (stoma)="mouth".
It comprises roughly 60,000 species. (99% of all living vertebrates).
Living gnathostomes have teeth, and paired appendages.
A horizontal semicircular canal is present in the inner ear.
Myelin sheaths is present on the neurons.
Adaptive immune system uses V(D) J recombination ( it is the mechanism of somatic recombination that occurs only in developing lymphocytes during the early stages of T and B cell maturation. VDJ recombination is the process by which T cells and B cells randomly assemble different gene segments – known as variable (V), diversity (D) and joining (J) genes – in order to generate unique receptors (known as antigen receptors) that can collectively recognize many different types of molecule. While Agnatha (petromyzon and hagfish) use genetic recombination in the variable lymphocyte receptor gene.
It is now assumed that Gnathostomata evolved from ancestors that already possessed a pair of both pectoral and pelvic fins.
In addition to this, some placoderms were shown to have a third pair of paired appendages, that had been modified to claspers in males and basal plates in females—a pattern not seen in any other vertebrate group.
It is believed that the jaws evolved from anterior gill support arches that had acquired a new role, being modified to pump water over the gills by opening and closing the mouth more effectively – the buccal pump mechanism.
Presence of Calcified, bony skull and vertebra are the characteristic features of Gnathostomata (fishes, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals).
Pelvic fins are situated just in front of the anus.
Interventrals and basiventrals present in the backbone. These are the elements of the backbone which lie under the notochord, and match the basidorsals and interdorsals respectively.
Gill arches which lie internally to the gills and branchial blood vessels, contrary to the gill arches of all jawless craniates, which are external to the gills and blood vessels.
A horizontal semicircular canal in the inner ear.
Paired nasal sacs which are independent from the hypophysial tube.
There are numerous other characteristics of the soft anatomy and physiology (e.g. myelinated nerve fibres, sperms passing through urinary ducts, etc.), which are unique to the gnathostomes among extant craniates, but cannot by observed in fossils.
Mollusca of India and need for conservationAshish sahu
Mollusca is the second-largest phylum of invertebrate animals after the Arthropoda. The members are known as molluscs or mollusks. Around 85,000 extant species of molluscs are recognized. The number of fossil species is estimated between 60,000 and 100,000 additional species
Geographical Indications (GI)
Types of GI
Why GI needs to be protected?
Advantages of GI
How are GIs Protected?
WIPO and GI
GI in India
Registration process
GI in Tamil Nadu
Observation of Io’s Resurfacing via Plume Deposition Using Ground-based Adapt...Sérgio Sacani
Since volcanic activity was first discovered on Io from Voyager images in 1979, changes
on Io’s surface have been monitored from both spacecraft and ground-based telescopes.
Here, we present the highest spatial resolution images of Io ever obtained from a groundbased telescope. These images, acquired by the SHARK-VIS instrument on the Large
Binocular Telescope, show evidence of a major resurfacing event on Io’s trailing hemisphere. When compared to the most recent spacecraft images, the SHARK-VIS images
show that a plume deposit from a powerful eruption at Pillan Patera has covered part
of the long-lived Pele plume deposit. Although this type of resurfacing event may be common on Io, few have been detected due to the rarity of spacecraft visits and the previously low spatial resolution available from Earth-based telescopes. The SHARK-VIS instrument ushers in a new era of high resolution imaging of Io’s surface using adaptive
optics at visible wavelengths.
This pdf is about the Schizophrenia.
For more details visit on YouTube; @SELF-EXPLANATORY;
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Introduction:
RNA interference (RNAi) or Post-Transcriptional Gene Silencing (PTGS) is an important biological process for modulating eukaryotic gene expression.
It is highly conserved process of posttranscriptional gene silencing by which double stranded RNA (dsRNA) causes sequence-specific degradation of mRNA sequences.
dsRNA-induced gene silencing (RNAi) is reported in a wide range of eukaryotes ranging from worms, insects, mammals and plants.
This process mediates resistance to both endogenous parasitic and exogenous pathogenic nucleic acids, and regulates the expression of protein-coding genes.
What are small ncRNAs?
micro RNA (miRNA)
short interfering RNA (siRNA)
Properties of small non-coding RNA:
Involved in silencing mRNA transcripts.
Called “small” because they are usually only about 21-24 nucleotides long.
Synthesized by first cutting up longer precursor sequences (like the 61nt one that Lee discovered).
Silence an mRNA by base pairing with some sequence on the mRNA.
Discovery of siRNA?
The first small RNA:
In 1993 Rosalind Lee (Victor Ambros lab) was studying a non- coding gene in C. elegans, lin-4, that was involved in silencing of another gene, lin-14, at the appropriate time in the
development of the worm C. elegans.
Two small transcripts of lin-4 (22nt and 61nt) were found to be complementary to a sequence in the 3' UTR of lin-14.
Because lin-4 encoded no protein, she deduced that it must be these transcripts that are causing the silencing by RNA-RNA interactions.
Types of RNAi ( non coding RNA)
MiRNA
Length (23-25 nt)
Trans acting
Binds with target MRNA in mismatch
Translation inhibition
Si RNA
Length 21 nt.
Cis acting
Bind with target Mrna in perfect complementary sequence
Piwi-RNA
Length ; 25 to 36 nt.
Expressed in Germ Cells
Regulates trnasposomes activity
MECHANISM OF RNAI:
First the double-stranded RNA teams up with a protein complex named Dicer, which cuts the long RNA into short pieces.
Then another protein complex called RISC (RNA-induced silencing complex) discards one of the two RNA strands.
The RISC-docked, single-stranded RNA then pairs with the homologous mRNA and destroys it.
THE RISC COMPLEX:
RISC is large(>500kD) RNA multi- protein Binding complex which triggers MRNA degradation in response to MRNA
Unwinding of double stranded Si RNA by ATP independent Helicase
Active component of RISC is Ago proteins( ENDONUCLEASE) which cleave target MRNA.
DICER: endonuclease (RNase Family III)
Argonaute: Central Component of the RNA-Induced Silencing Complex (RISC)
One strand of the dsRNA produced by Dicer is retained in the RISC complex in association with Argonaute
ARGONAUTE PROTEIN :
1.PAZ(PIWI/Argonaute/ Zwille)- Recognition of target MRNA
2.PIWI (p-element induced wimpy Testis)- breaks Phosphodiester bond of mRNA.)RNAse H activity.
MiRNA:
The Double-stranded RNAs are naturally produced in eukaryotic cells during development, and they have a key role in regulating gene expression .
Multi-source connectivity as the driver of solar wind variability in the heli...Sérgio Sacani
The ambient solar wind that flls the heliosphere originates from multiple
sources in the solar corona and is highly structured. It is often described
as high-speed, relatively homogeneous, plasma streams from coronal
holes and slow-speed, highly variable, streams whose source regions are
under debate. A key goal of ESA/NASA’s Solar Orbiter mission is to identify
solar wind sources and understand what drives the complexity seen in the
heliosphere. By combining magnetic feld modelling and spectroscopic
techniques with high-resolution observations and measurements, we show
that the solar wind variability detected in situ by Solar Orbiter in March
2022 is driven by spatio-temporal changes in the magnetic connectivity to
multiple sources in the solar atmosphere. The magnetic feld footpoints
connected to the spacecraft moved from the boundaries of a coronal hole
to one active region (12961) and then across to another region (12957). This
is refected in the in situ measurements, which show the transition from fast
to highly Alfvénic then to slow solar wind that is disrupted by the arrival of
a coronal mass ejection. Our results describe solar wind variability at 0.5 au
but are applicable to near-Earth observatories.
Deep Behavioral Phenotyping in Systems Neuroscience for Functional Atlasing a...Ana Luísa Pinho
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) provides means to characterize brain activations in response to behavior. However, cognitive neuroscience has been limited to group-level effects referring to the performance of specific tasks. To obtain the functional profile of elementary cognitive mechanisms, the combination of brain responses to many tasks is required. Yet, to date, both structural atlases and parcellation-based activations do not fully account for cognitive function and still present several limitations. Further, they do not adapt overall to individual characteristics. In this talk, I will give an account of deep-behavioral phenotyping strategies, namely data-driven methods in large task-fMRI datasets, to optimize functional brain-data collection and improve inference of effects-of-interest related to mental processes. Key to this approach is the employment of fast multi-functional paradigms rich on features that can be well parametrized and, consequently, facilitate the creation of psycho-physiological constructs to be modelled with imaging data. Particular emphasis will be given to music stimuli when studying high-order cognitive mechanisms, due to their ecological nature and quality to enable complex behavior compounded by discrete entities. I will also discuss how deep-behavioral phenotyping and individualized models applied to neuroimaging data can better account for the subject-specific organization of domain-general cognitive systems in the human brain. Finally, the accumulation of functional brain signatures brings the possibility to clarify relationships among tasks and create a univocal link between brain systems and mental functions through: (1) the development of ontologies proposing an organization of cognitive processes; and (2) brain-network taxonomies describing functional specialization. To this end, tools to improve commensurability in cognitive science are necessary, such as public repositories, ontology-based platforms and automated meta-analysis tools. I will thus discuss some brain-atlasing resources currently under development, and their applicability in cognitive as well as clinical neuroscience.
Richard's entangled aventures in wonderlandRichard Gill
Since the loophole-free Bell experiments of 2020 and the Nobel prizes in physics of 2022, critics of Bell's work have retreated to the fortress of super-determinism. Now, super-determinism is a derogatory word - it just means "determinism". Palmer, Hance and Hossenfelder argue that quantum mechanics and determinism are not incompatible, using a sophisticated mathematical construction based on a subtle thinning of allowed states and measurements in quantum mechanics, such that what is left appears to make Bell's argument fail, without altering the empirical predictions of quantum mechanics. I think however that it is a smoke screen, and the slogan "lost in math" comes to my mind. I will discuss some other recent disproofs of Bell's theorem using the language of causality based on causal graphs. Causal thinking is also central to law and justice. I will mention surprising connections to my work on serial killer nurse cases, in particular the Dutch case of Lucia de Berk and the current UK case of Lucy Letby.
Comparing Evolved Extractive Text Summary Scores of Bidirectional Encoder Rep...University of Maribor
Slides from:
11th International Conference on Electrical, Electronics and Computer Engineering (IcETRAN), Niš, 3-6 June 2024
Track: Artificial Intelligence
https://www.etran.rs/2024/en/home-english/
Seminar of U.V. Spectroscopy by SAMIR PANDASAMIR PANDA
Spectroscopy is a branch of science dealing the study of interaction of electromagnetic radiation with matter.
Ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy refers to absorption spectroscopy or reflect spectroscopy in the UV-VIS spectral region.
Ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy is an analytical method that can measure the amount of light received by the analyte.
4. •Endoparasites
•Atleast one intermediate host in their lifecycle
•Harbours on most wild and many cultured fish
Shape -Tape-like; segmented
Sexes -Not separate,i.e.,Hermaphrodite
(monoecious)
Head space -Suckers, often with hooks
Alimentary canal -Absent
Body cavity -Absent
5. Taxonomy
Phylum- Platyhelminthes
Class – Cestoda
Group- Cestodaria Eucestoda
2 orders 11 orders
Gyrocotylidae Caryophilidae
Amphilinidae Pesudophilidae
Proteocephalidae
Cestodaria- monozoic ie. Unsegmented
Eucestoda- Polyzoic ie. Segmented
Order Tetraphyllidae
Trypanorhyncha very common in Elasmobranch
6. Amphilinidae
• Small group have 8 species
•Gigantolina magna – parasite of marine
teleost
•All other species infect freshwater teleost
and turtles
•10 larval hooks
Gyrocotylidae
•10 known species
•Intestinal parasites of the entirely marine
holocephali
Pesudophyllidae – 50% marine
Tetraphyllidae - 95% marine
Trypanorhyncha -95% marine
7. 1. Caryophyllidea (Caryophyllaeus and Khawia),
2. Pseudophyllidea (Ligula, Schistocephalus, Diphyllobothrium and Triaenopho
3. Proteocephalidea (Proteocephalus spp.).
The cestode genus Proteocephalus occurs worldwide; however, very
little is known about the mechanisms of species distribution within the
host range.
8.
9. Morphology
•Adult worm white in color
•Very elongated
Body or Strobila – Flattened
Cephalic portion of Strobila differentiated into an attachment
organ Scolex
Cestodaria – No Scolex
10. Scolex has specialised attachment
structures such as
• Hooks,
•Sucker like organs( Bothria, Bothrium,
Acetabula)
•Spined tentacles
•Apical organ
11. •Apical organs composed of Muscular /
granular elements
•Proteins, lipids , glycoproteins were
detected within the granules
•Scolex is followed by
Neck(undifferentiated part of Strobila)
•Scolex has germ cells that generates new
Segments – Proglottids
12. Maturation of Segments
Apolytic Cestodes – Gravid segments
Enapolytic Cestodes – Mature but non
gravid segments
Hyperpolytic cestodes – Immature segments
No digestive tract because there is no Body cavity or Coelom
Body covering of Cestode – Tegument
Synctial structure
With surface modification in the form of
• Gylcocalyx
• Microtriches
Rich in Phospholipids (phosphotidylcholine is abundant)
13. Lifecycle
Fish can serve as Intermediate and Definitive host for tapeworms
All cestodes are Oviparous
The plerocercoid is long - lived in the fish host, which can
accumulate parasites throughout its life.
14. The magnitude of size increase is spectacular in
larval Ligula and Schistocephalus, where, in the
body cavity of the fish, the biomass of the parasite
may reach 40% of the body weight of the host.
15. One of the most serious adult
cestodes that affect fish is the
Asian Tapeworm –
Bothriocephalus acheilognathi
Ligula intestinalis in a cyprinid
Ligulids have a global distribution, mainly
as parasites of cyprinid and catostomid
fish.
Species of Diphyllobothrium in fish have a
similar life cycle to that of the ligulids but,
except for D. latum , the broad fish
tapeworm of humans, the plerocercoid
stage is typically found in salmonids and
coregonids.
16. Diphyllobothrium spp. infection in the peritoneal cavity of a brown trout. A
feature of such infections is the severe fibrinous peritonitis that is
induced by the plerocercoids.
Diphyllobothriid
plerocercoids
become encysted
amongst the
viscera and in
the musculature
of the fish,
17. Parasites of Freshwater Tropical Fishes
Like Digenetic trematodes rarely affect the ornamental fishes as adult
worms
Wild caught ornamental fish serves as Secondary intermediate host
Result – Poor growth,
Emaciation
Lake trout fillet with Cyst
18. Parasites of marine
Tropical Fishes
Adult cestodes -harmful parasites in
Digestive tract
Plerocercoids greatest concern in
marine
Larvae of Tryphanorhynca - Spagetti
worms in Drummers of Gulf of
mexico
Wormy couta- in Austrailan barracuda
– larvae of Gymnorhynchus thyrsites
Rainbow trout with a massive
infection of Diphyllobothrium
dentriticum plerocercoids ( arrows ).
The larvae are encapsulated mainly
around the stomach and pyloric caeca
19. Parasites of Elasmobranch
Common in spiral valves
400 described sp of cestodes from Shark,Skate and
Ray
Harbours on digestive tract
Intermediate host – fish, gastropod, crustaceans
Final host - Shark,Skate and Ray
No mortality due to cestode
infestation in shark
Pathology
cavitation
Localized hemmorhage
Compress of intestinal microvilli
20. Common parasite of both Marine and Fresh water
fishes.
Although parasitic nematodes can infect almost all
organs in a fish, the majority of the currently known
species have been described from the intestine.
Adult worm in the ovary
. Liverwith encysted, anisakid,
nematode larvae.
21. • Shape Elongated, cylindrical;
unsegmented
• Sexes Separate (diecious)
• Head space No suckers, no
hooks. Well developed
buccal capsule in
some species
• Alimentary canal Present and
complete;
• Anus present
• Body cavity present
22. Taxonomy
Phylum – Nematoda
Class - Adenophorea Secernentea.
Families- Dioctophymatidae,
Capillariidae
Cystiopsidae
i. Adenophorea consist mostly of free-living
marine and freshwater species, as well as
terrestrial soil nematodes with only a small
number of parasitic organisms
ii. Secernentea also have free-living taxa, but
the vast majority of this class are parasitic
organisms.
23. Morphology
Generally elongated worm with cylindrical body tapering at the
both ends - fusiform shape
Most fish nematodes are a whitish to tan color
Some are Reddish due the color of Pseudocoelomic fluid
•Pseudoterronova larvae – own heamoglobin
•Camallanus sp – from feeding on host blood
Swim bladder worms ( Anguillicola ).
Dark color is due to feeding on blood
24. The cuticle of nematodes
is elastic, and it is thick in gut-dwelling species (Hysterothylacium,
Eustrongylides) and
relatively delicate in histozoic specimens (Philometra rischta,
Daniconema anguillae)
External surface
• smooth
• some have row of spines on their cuticle
(eg;Spintetctus, Gnathosoma)
Body wall lacks Circular muscle
Body covered by Collagenous Cuticle shed periodically in life of
nematodes by Ecdysis
The cuticle are without cilia.
25. •Mouth have lips may prominent in later larval stages and reach their
full expressions in adult
The structure of the mouth shows
great variations.
It may be a simple slit-like opening at
the anterior end surrounded by
distinct or indistinct papillae
(Capillaria, Philometra), but it can
form large labia or cuticular
outgrowths (Fig) called Interlabia
(Hysterothylacium, Anisakis,
Raphidascaris)
26. The mouth leads into the buccal capsule
(Figs12.7and12.8),which can be sclerotized and
furnished with large denticles, ridges, plates or tridents
(Camallanus, Cucullanus, Skrjabillanus, Anguillicola).
27. Some have teeth guarding
the rim of mouth
( Anguillicola)
Most of them posses sensory
structures such as papillae that
surround the mouth and the
anterior end which serve as
chemoreceptors
28. The male reproductive organ usually
consists of testis, vas deferens,
seminal vesicle and ductus
ejaculatorius.
The ejaculary duct, opening into the
cloaca, has some accessory copulatory
organs.
The most common accessory organs
are the sclerotized spicules.
Mostly 2 Spicules
Angullicola-nil
Capillaridae-1
29. The female reproductive organs are composed of ovaries, oviducts,
uteri, vagina and vulva.
In Capillaria and Raphidascaris spp - the vulva is found in the first
part of the body length,
but in Camallanus and Rhabdochona spp -posteriorally.
The Capillospirura -at mid-length.
In adult Philometra spp -the vulva and vagina are absent
They do not have protonephridia, respiratory organs or blood
systems
Female nematodes are usually larger than males
Life cycle
Most fish nematodes are Oviparous
30.
31. Camallanus spp
Easily recognised as small thread like worm protruding
from anus of the fish
Capillaria spp
Large round worm
Commonly found in the gut of angel fish
Often recognised by its double operculated eggs in the female worm
32. Eustrongylides
Eustrongylides is a nematode that uses fish as its
intermediate host. The definitive host is a wading bird, a
common visitor to ponds. The worm encysts in the peritoneum
or muscle of the fish and appears to cause little damage.
Because of the large size of the worms ( Figure ), infected fish
may appear unsuitable for retail sales.
33. Parasites of freshwater tropical fishes
No genera associated with freshwater tropical fishes.
Eustrongyloides- encysted in muscles
Capillaria- frequently found in FW
Camallanus- Guppies and swordtails seem to be most frequent
Adult & larval forms – in lumen of intestine
Free migratory forms – peritonieal Cavity
Encysted forms – in musculature
Heavy and moderate infections with
Anguillicola crassus in opened swim
bladders of European eels
34. Parasites of marine tropical fishes
Crustaceans – 1st intermediate host
Ascaridoidae- Anisakis, Contracaecum, Terranova
Spiruroidae – Ascarophis, metabronema
Camallonoidae- Aslanus, Camallanus
Dracunuloidae- Philometra, philonema
Common pathology
visceral adhesion
Edema
Granuloma
Philometra oviata in gudgeon
Heavy infestation reported in White spotted puffer fish from Hawaiian waters
35. Parasites of Elasmobranch
•Very small no
•Only 68 sp
Most belongs to 2 families
1. Heterocheilidae of order Ascanididae
2. Cucullanidae of the order of Spiruridae
Primarily in digestive tract
visible nodules on the exterior of the intestion
Nematodes of shark require atleast one intermediate host usually
Crustaceans
Second intermediate host – fish (Pleuronectidae, Gadidae)
36. Thorny or Spiny
headed worms
They are mostly
elongate
cylindrical worms
Armed with an
anterior retractile
proboscis bearing
hooks in a large
variety of patterns.
There is no gut and
the sexes are
separate.
37. Acanthocephalans are Endoparasitic worms.
Found as adults in the intestine of fishes.
Juvenile worms of many other species occur in the
viscera, especially the mesentery and liver, of fishes
Diagram of typical adult
acanthocephalan.
Acanthocephalans
embedded in the
intestinal mucosa of a
fish.
38. Taxonomy
Phylum Acanthocephala
The acanthocephalans comprise four classes, and only two
of which, the Palaeacanthocephala and Eoacanthocephala,
contain members parasitic on fish.
Many species occuring in marine environment show more
extended distributional range than those being transmitted in
freshwater.
The species Acanthocephalus lucii and A.anguillae use the same
intermediate host, the isopod Asellus aquaticus
39. Morphology
Body has
• Presoma(Proboscis and neck) inserted into
the intestinal wall
•Metasoma (trunk) lying inside the intestinal
lumen of the final host
•Proboscis- major holdfast organis usually kept
semi-invaginated
.
40. The neck is usually short and
inconspicuous, but in some genera
it is extremely elongated and may
be inflated to form a bulb.
Body wall is thick tegument
which is a syncytium
Females are larger than males
Body length of adults varies
greatly among species, ranging
from less than 2 mm to greater
than 700 mm. Acanthocephalans of
most species are about 10 mm
long.
The structure of acanthocephalans.
(A)Adult male. (B) Adult female.
41. Metasoma is lined by Glycocalyx- to absorb CHO and aminoacids from
lumen of the host gut
The different depth of penetration coincides with a morphological
feature
The perforating species A.Anguillae has long neck while the neck is short
in the non-perforating congener
The remainder of the body is a trunk, which, in some species, bears
tegumental spines, which may enhance attachment to the host intestine
42. The genital pore occurs posteriorly on the trunk, and
in males it is surrounded by an invaginable bursa
In males there are two testes followed posteriorly by
one to eight cement glands
Embyonated eggs are sorted by egg sorting organ
Like tapeworms, Acanthocephalans dont have an
intestine.
Scanning electron micrograph
of an egg showing
unwrapping of egg
membranes
43. At least one intermediate arthropod host is required in the life cycle
44.
45. Parasites of freshwater tropical fishes
•Major problem in wild FW or marine fishes
•Incidence in ornamental freshwater tropical fishes is low
•Parasite load is very low
•Generally 1or 2
•Intermediate host – wild caught ornamental fish
•Final host- bird or large fish
Parasites of marine tropical fishes
oPomphorhynchus & Echinorhynchus found in marine
oRarely encounterd in Reef fishes
oAdult – intestine
oHost – amphipod
Parasites of Elasmobranch
Harmful effects on bony fishes Not responsible for mortalities
Infection in elasmobranch is rare
Only one sp is reported in Spiny dogfish
47. The glochidia larvae of fresh - water bivalve molluscs are
often found attached to the gills and outer surfaces of fish.
The larvae have thin bivalve shells often with little hooks
on their inner edge
48. Morphology
Shells are small,spherical or oval
Laterally compressed
Byssus thread
Has sharp spines projecting
inward from each valve
It lures fish close by exposing a
piece of their mantle in the water
49. Once the glochidia are released from the female, they
must attach to the gills or the fins of the right fish host
and encyst to complete development. Otherwise they
won’t survive.
Taxonomy
Kingdom; Animalia
Phyllum: Mollusca
Class; Bivalvia
Family: Unionidae
Margaritiferidae
50. Glochidia, undergo an
obligatory parasitic phase
on fish.
The glochidia are released
from the adult mollusc and
If they come into contact
with a suitable fish they
clamp on to the gills, fins or
skin, become surrounded
by host tissue and in time
undergo a metamorphosis
to form a juvenile mollusc.
These are eventually shed from the fish and grow to maturity as
free - living molluscs. Glochidia may remain on the fish for several
months
51. References
1. Fish disease and Disorders Volume 2 by P.T.K. Woo
2. Fish pathology – 4 th edition By Roberts
3. Introductrion to Freshwater Fish Parasites by RuthEllen
Klinger and Ruth Francis Floyd
4. Fish Disease- Volume 2 By Jorge C.Eiras , Helmut
Segner, Thomas Wahli, B.G. Kapoor
5. Fish Disease diagnosis and treatment by
Edward.J.Noga
6. Marine parasitology Edited by Klaus Rhode
Editor's Notes
The only similar between Cestodaria and Caryophyllidae is their unsegmented body
For taxonomic investigation of proboscis –hooks are counted and measured
Females carry copulatory cap –imposed by males after injection of sperms.continue to carry untill they start discharging eggs
They absorb nutrients through densely packed outer mambrane