Publications (14) View all
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Article: Identification of transferrin in Atlantic cod Gadus morhua epidermal mucus.
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ABSTRACT: The previously unreported presence of transferrin in Atlantic cod Gadus morhua epidermal mucus is described. A less destructive sampling method, which may result in decreased epidermal tissue damage, is discussed.Journal of Fish Biology 11/2012; 81(6):2059-63. · 1.68 Impact Factor -
Article: Taxonomy and host-specificity of Gyrodactylus aideni n. sp. and G. pleuronecti (Monogenea: Gyrodactylidae) from Pseudopleuronectes americanus (Walbaum) in Passamaquoddy Bay, New Brunswick, Canada.
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ABSTRACT: Wild and cultured winter flounder Pseudopleuronectes americanus (Walbaum) from Passamaquoddy Bay were surveyed for species of Gyrodactylus Nordmann, 1832. Two species were found: G. pleuronecti Cone, 1981 and G. aideni n. sp, both members of Malmberg's 'groenlandicus group'. Although the hard parts in the haptor are very similar in the two species, hamuli of G. aideni are consistently shorter than those of G. pleuronecti. The two species differed by 35 base pairs in the ITS 1, 5.8 and ITS 2 region. A BLAST search identified a variety of species of Gyrodactylus from marine fishes in the Atlantic Ocean as closest matches, indicating the 'groenlandicus group' is part of a major marine lineage within Gyrodactylus (sensu lato) that has successfully radiated among coastal percid, pleuronectid, cottid and anarhichadid fishes. Exposure experiments suggested that winter flounder is the primary host of both species of parasites and that three other pleuronectid species in the bay may potentially serve only as occasional transport hosts.Systematic Parasitology 11/2010; 77(3):233-9. · 1.25 Impact Factor -
Article: Determinants of host specificity and comments on attachment site specificity of tetraphyllidean cestodes infecting rajid skates from the northwest Atlantic.
Haseeb S Randhawa, Michael B D Burt[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The objectives of this study were to (1) describe the host range for 6 tetraphyllidean species and quantify their host specificity using 5 specificity indices; (2) determine the role of morphological determinants in the host specificity of tetraphyllideans by comparing villar and bothridial measurements of species examined herein; and (3) determine the role of a physiological component in the host specificity of tetraphyllideans by exposing tetraphyllideans to blood sera from different fish species and other solutions. Our results indicate that Echeneibothrium dubium abyssorum (ex Amblyraja radiata), Echeneibothrium canadensis (ex A. radiata), and Zyxibothrium kamienae (ex Malacoraja senta) exhibit the highest degree of specificity, followed by Echeneibothrium vernetae (ex Leucoraja erinacea and Leucoraja ocellata), Pseudanthobothrium hanseni (ex A. radiata and M. senta), and Pseudanthobothrium purtoni (ex Leucoraja erinacea and L. ocellata). However, these results vary based on the specificity index used. Compatible bothridial and villar measurements indicate that there is no morphological determinant of host specificity but that there is a morphological determinant to attachment site specificity. Our data indicate that attachment site specificity may also be phylogenetically determined. Additionally, the exposure of parasites to blood sera from various hosts confirms that host specificity in this system has a physiological determinant. Therefore, host specificity in this system is determined, at least in part, by physiological factors, whereas attachment site specificity is an extension of host specificity and is phylogenetically determined.Journal of Parasitology 05/2008; 94(2):436-61. · 1.40 Impact Factor -
Article: Redescription of Pseudanthobothrium hanseni Baer, 1956 and description of P. purtoni n. sp. (Cestoda: Tetraphyllidea) from different pairs of rajid skate hosts, with comments on the host-specificity of the genus in the Northwest Atlantic.
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ABSTRACT: During a parasitological survey of Leucoraja erinacea, L. ocellata, Malacoraja senta and Amblyraja radiata from Passamaquoddy Bay and waters surrounding the West Isles of the Bay of Fundy, NB, Canada, seven species of cestodes were recovered. Examination of these skates revealed the presence of two distinct species of Pseudanthobothrium Baer, 1956: one was retrieved from M. senta and A. radiata, identified as P. hanseni Baer, 1956 and redescribed herein; the other was retrieved from L. erinacea and L. ocellata and differs from previously described species. The new species is described herein as P. purtoni n. sp. on the basis of the degree of apolysis, the maximum width of the strobila, the length of the cirrus-sac and the number of testes. Additionally, the distinctiveness of both species of Pseudanthobothrium is supported by the characterisation of a 643 base-pair nuclear marker, which includes most of the D2 variable region of the large subunit ribosomal DNA (LSU). The recovery of two different tetraphyllidean species, each from two different host species, challenges the oioxeny (strict host-specificity) of echeneibothriine cestodes and can be explained, at least in part, by the similarities in diet and substrate preference within each host pair.Systematic Parasitology 06/2008; 70(1):41-60. · 1.25 Impact Factor -
Article: Recent appearance and pathology of Actinobdella pediculata (Hirudinea) on freshwater drum, Aplodinotus grunniens Rafinesque, in Hay Bay, Lake Ontario.
Journal of Fish Diseases 04/2008; 31(3):229-33. · 2.00 Impact Factor