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Light and electron microscope study of a new species of Urosporidium (Haplosporida), hyperparasite of trematode sporocysts in the clam Abra ovata
Authors:Rene Ormières  Victor Sprague  Pierre Bartoli
Affiliation:1. Faculté des Sciences de Montpellier (Zool. Pr. O. Tuzet), France;2. University of Maryland, Natural Resources Institute, Chesapeake Biological Laboratory, Solomons, Maryland 20688, USA;3. Faculté des Sciences de Marseille (Laboratoire de Zoologie B.) France
Abstract:Abra ovata, collected at Bcauduc, France, contained sporocysts of Gymnophallus nereicola and another trematode of the family Monorchiidae. Frequently the former trematode and occasionally the latter was infected with a species of Urosporidium. Stages observed were mostly in the sporogenesis sequence. The sporoblast, an elongated body of uncertain origin, differentiates into two parts delimited by a girdle-shaped constriction between them. These are an anterior part, or sporoplasm primordium, containing a vesicular nucleus and a posterior part, or envelope primordium, containing a “parietal apparatus” (possibly a transformed nucleus). Cytoplasm of the envelope primordium (just behind the constriction) advances to enclose the sporoplasm primordium while it differentiates into endospore, exospore and an internally situated cover over the orifice. These two primordia separate late in the sporogenesis sequence. Thus, the typical haplosporidan spore may, as Cépède reported in 1911, consist of 2 cells, a generative cell enveloped by a somatic cell. Evidence that the Haplosporida have bicellular spores raises fundamental questions regarding the taxonomy of this group.
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