Saccosporidae

Saccosporidae is a family of myxozoans.[1][2] It is the only family within the class Malacosporea and has only three species, while the other class of Myxozoa, Myxosporea, includes more than a thousand.

Saccosporidae
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Cnidaria
Class: Malacosporea
Canning, Curry, Feist, Longshaw & Okamura, 2000
Family: Saccosporidae
Canning, Okamura & Curry, 1996
Genera

See text

Taxonomy and systematics

Description

Saccosporidae are parasites of fish and freshwater bryozoans. Tetracapsuloides bryosalmonae, the only representative of the group whose life cycle is well studied, causes proliferative disease of the kidneys in salmonids. Two stages of the life cycles of the two species in the genus Buddenbrockia are known. One of them is a saccular stage, similar to Tetracapsuloides. During the second stage the animals are mobile and superficially resemble minute worms. Buddenbrockia allmani parasitizes Lophopus crystallinus, while Buddenbrockia plumatellae parasitizes, in particular, Plumatella fungosa.

References

  • Tops S, Baxa DV, McDowell TS, Hedrick RP, Okamura B (2004). "Evaluation of malacosporean life cycles through transmission studies". Dis Aquat Organ. 60 (2): 109–121.
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