Eimeria grayi, Jacobson & Ossiboff & Paquet-Durand & Childress & Barrett & Marlin & McAllister & Walden, 2022

Jacobson, Elliott R., Ossiboff, Robert J., Paquet-Durand, Isabelle, Childress, April L., Barrett, Heather, Marlin, Jacob, McAllister, Chris T. & Walden, Heather D. S., 2022, A New Coccidian (Apicomplexa: Eimeriidae) in the Critically Endangered Central American River Turtle (Dermatemys Mawii) in Belize, Journal of Parasitology 108 (1), pp. 92-99 : 95-96

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1645/21-44

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7093843

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F987BD-FFE9-FFC7-904D-F9BA7C4E5BA1

treatment provided by

Tatiana

scientific name

Eimeria grayi
status

sp. nov.

Eimeria grayi n. sp.

( Figs. 2–5 View Figure 2 View Figure 3 View Figure 4 View Figure 5 )

Description of sporulated oocyst: Oocyst shape (n - 15): ellipsoidal; smooth, thin-walled; L x W: 30.4 (26–35) x 15.2 (13–17), L/W: 2.0 (1.7–2.5); M, OR, PG: all absent. Distinctive feature of oocyst: 3 conical projections (2.1–3.5 long) present on 1 end, with the oocyst wall forming a broadly pointed end on the opposite pole.

Description of sporocyst and sporozoites: SP: (n - 4); shape: elongate–ellipsoidal, with a smooth single-layered wall; L x W: 13.7 x 7.5 (12–19 x 6–12), L/W 1.8 (1.7–2.2); SR: sporocyst residuum, coarsely granular, and scattered; SZ: banana-shaped, 14.2 x 3.6 (14–15 x 3–4) in situ; N visible, slightly posterior to midpoint of SZ. Distinctive feature of SP: slightly pointed at 1 end with a distinct SB, SR of only a few globules, and a SRB in each SZ.

Taxonomic summary

Type host: Central American river turtle, Dermatemys mawii Gray, 1847 ( Testudines : Dermatemydidae ). Collected 11 August and 11 November 2018. Host photovouchers: University of Florida (UF) 191862-191866.

Type and only locality: Belize Foundation for Research and Environmental Education , Mile Marker 58 , Southern Highway , Belize, Central America (16 ° 33.326 ' N, 88 ° 42.423 ' W). GoogleMaps

Prevalence: 1/3 (33%) based on oocyst identification in samples; 3/3 (100%) based on PCR and sequencing of the 18S rRNA and ITS genes.

Materials deposited: Photosyntype of a sporulated oocyst is deposited in the Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology (HWML), University of Nebraska, as HWML 206401.

ZooBank registration: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:B7C62C80- DF94-49F0-A73F-586C1FB2B578.

Etymology: The specific epithet is named in honor of the British naturalist, John Edward Gray (1800–1875), who described the host in 1847.

Molecular biology: All 3 fecal samples had similar content of the 18S rRNA and ITS genes. After primer editing, a 347-bp segment of the 18S rRNA gene was determined for the hicatee coccidian (GenBank accession MW538581 View Materials ). BLASTn results identified 99.4% sequence identity to several apicomplexan organisms, including Caryospora -like sp. US3 ( MN450817 View Materials ) from a green sea turtle ( Chelonia mydas ), Caryospora cheloniae genotype 1 ( KT361639 View Materials ) from Ch. mydas , and multiple lizard Schellackia spp. The hicatee coccidian was 99.7% identical to a 347-bp segment of the 18S rRNA gene of the reference sample of E. mitraria (GenBank accession MW538549 View Materials ). An 841-bp segment of the ITS region was determined for the hicatee coccidian and reference sample of E. mitraria (GenBank accessions MW538550 View Materials and MW538533 View Materials , respectively), with 75.2% sequence identity to each other. Bayesian phylogenetic analysis placed the hicatee coccidian in a clade with Eimeria collieie , E. mitraria , Eimeria arnyi , and 2 coccidians of green sea turtles ( Ca. cheloniae and Caryospora-like sp. US3) with a posterior probability of 0.89 ( Fig. 6 View Figure 6 ).

Remarks

The oocysts being passed by the hicatee possessed multiple conical projections with 3 projecting from 1 pole and a broaderbased projection from the opposite pole ( Figs. 2–5 View Figure 2 View Figure 3 View Figure 4 View Figure 5 ). To date, the 7 previously described oocysts of Testudines having mitra-like conical projections or irregular surfaces from at least 1 end of their oocyst are (1) Eimeria amazonensis from the red-footed tortoise, Chelonoidis (formerly Geochelone ) carbonaria from Brazil ( Lainson et al., 2008); (2) Eimeria hynekprokopi from the Indochinese box turtle, Cuora galbinifrons from Vietnam (Široký and Modrý, 2010); (3) Eimeria iversoni from a captive Galapagos tortoise, Chelonoidis sp. ( McAllister et al., 2014); (4) Eimeria jirkamoraveci in the Neotropical chelid turtle Mesoclemmys (previously Batrachemys ) heliostemma (Široký et al., 2006); (5) E. mitraria originally described from the Asian Chinese threekeeled pond turtle, Mauremys (formerly Chinemys ) reevesii and subsequently described in multiple species of aquatic turtles on 3 continents ( Laveran and Mesnil, 1902; Duszynski and Morrow, 2014); (6) Eimeria motelo from the yellow-footed tortoise, Chelonoidis (formerly Geochelone ) denticulata , from Peru (Hurkováet al., 2000); and (7) Eimeria stylosa in the red-eared slider from Texas ( McAllister and Upton, 1989). Overall, oocysts of E. grayi are considerably larger than other coccidians with surface projections ( Table I View Table I ).

Kingdom

Chromista

Phylum

Miozoa

Order

Eucoccidiida

Family

Eimeriidae

Genus

Eimeria

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