High prevalence of Paramarteilia canceri infecting velvet swimming crabs Necora puber in Ireland

Author:

Collins E1,Ward GM23,Bateman KS34,Cheslett DL1,Hooper C34,Feist SW34,Ironside JE5,Morrissey T1,O’Toole C1,Tully O1,Ross SH34,Stentiford GD34,Swords F1,Urrutia A3,Bass D234

Affiliation:

1. Marine Institute, Rinville, Oranmore H91 R673, Ireland

2. Department of Life Sciences, The Natural History Museum, London SW7 5BD, UK

3. International Centre of Excellence in Aquatic Animal Health, Centre for Environment, Aquaculture and Fisheries Science, Weymouth DT4 8UB, UK

4. Sustainable Aquaculture Futures, Biosciences, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Stocker Road, Exeter EX4 4QD, UK

5. Institute of Biological, Environmental & Rural Sciences (IBERS), Aberystwyth University, Aberystwyth SY23 3DA, UK

Abstract

The velvet swimming crab Necora puber has been fished in Ireland since the early 1980s and contributes significant income to smaller fishing vessels. From 2016 onwards, reduced landings have been reported. We undertook a full pathological investigation of crabs from fishing grounds at 3 sites on the west (Galway), southwest (Castletownbere) and east (Howth) coasts of Ireland. Histopathology, transmission electron microscopy and molecular taxonomic and phylogenetic analyses showed high prevalence and infection level of Paramarteilia canceri, previously only reported from the edible crab Cancer pagurus. This study provides the first molecular data for P. canceri, and shows its phylogenetic position in the order Paramyxida (Rhizaria). Other parasites and symbionts detected in the crabs were also noted, including widespread but low co-infection with Hematodinium sp. and a microsporidian consistent with the Ameson and Nadelspora genera. This is the first histological record of Hematodinium sp. in velvet crabs from Ireland. Four N. puber individuals across 2 sites were co-infected by P. canceri and Hematodinium sp. At one site, 3 velvet crabs infected with P. canceri were co-infected with the first microsporidian recorded from this host; the microsporidian 18S sequence was almost identical to Ameson pulvis, known to infect European shore crabs Carcinus maenas. The study provides a comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of this and all other available Ameson and Nadelspora 18S sequences. Together, these findings provide a baseline for further investigations of N. puber populations along the coast of Ireland.

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Center

Subject

Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference29 articles.

1. Bakir WMA, Healy B (1995) Reproductive cycle of the velvet swimming crab Necora puber (L.) (Decapoda, Brachyura, Portunidae) on the east coast of Ireland. Irish Fisheries Investigations Services B, Department of the Marine, Dublin

2. Concepts in protistology: Species definitions and boundaries

3. Christiansen ME (1969) Decapoda Brachyura. Marine invertebrates of Scandinavia 2. Universitetsforlaget, Oslo

4. Diagnosis and prevalence of two new species of haplosporidians infecting shore crabs Carcinus maenas: Haplosporidium carcini n. sp., and H. cranc n. sp.

5. Paramarteilia canceri sp. n. (Cercozoa) in the European edible crab (Cancer pagurus) with a proposal for the revision of the order Paramyxida Chatton, 1911

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