Revista Brasileira de Parasitologia Veterinária ()

Myxobolus sp. (Myxozoa; Myxosporea) causing asymptomatic parasitic gill disease in Astyanax aff. bimaculatus (Characiformes; Characidae) in the Tocantins river basin, amazon region, Brazil

  • Marcelo Francisco da Silva,
  • Dalila de Deus Sousa-Henrique,
  • Nirvana Messias-Luz,
  • Larissa dos Santos Borralho,
  • Jorge Diniz de Oliveira,
  • José Ledamir Sindeaux-Neto,
  • Edilson Rodrigues Matos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/s1984-29612019041

Abstract

Read online

Abstract The middle course of the Tocantins river is located in the eastern portion of the “Legal Amazon” region of Brazil and the Dantas river is one of its tributaries. Among the components of the aquatic biota, eukaryote microparasites establish direct relationships with several species of fish and have zoonotic potential that is still little known. Myxozoans stand out among these parasites: they cause myxosporidiosis, a disease that gives rise to high mortality rates worldwide. The genus Myxobolus accounts for the largest number of species that have been described. Thirty specimens of Astyanax aff. bimaculatus that had been caught in the Dantas river were examined. The prevalence of cysts with spores morphologically compatible with myxozoans of the genus Myxobolus in the arcuate and gill filaments of these specimens was 20%.

Keywords