Black mat syndrome,an invasive mycotic disease of the tanner crab, Chionoecetes bairdi |
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Authors: | Albert K. Sparks Jolly Hibbits |
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Affiliation: | Environmental Conservation Division, Northwest and Alaska Fisheries Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 2725 Montlake Boulevard East, Seattle, Washington 98112 USA |
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Abstract: | Black mat syndrome, caused by an encrusting fungus on the exterior of the carapace of tanner crabs, has been known for many years. Although it is a nuisance when processing crabs for the commercial market, it has been thought to be restricted to the external surfaces of the crab and, therefore, nonpathogenic. In the present study, 11 tanner crabs from the Kodiak area of Alaska with and 9 without grossly recognizable masses of the fungus on the carapace were necropsied and examined histologically utilizing special stains selective for fungi. In all individuals with the syndrome, hyphae of the fungus, previously identified as Phoma fimeti, penetrated the carapace and virtually replaced the underlying epidermis. In the more advanced cases, the eyestalk was invaded and the epidermis destroyed, and hyphae extended into the eyestalk musculature and nervous tissue. To date, infections of the connective tissue sheaths surrounding the esophagus, stomach, heart, hemopoetic tissue, thoracic ganglion, antennal gland, and ovary have also been observed. None of the crabs without the syndrome contained internal hyphae. Although data on the lethality of the disease are not yet available, the ease with which the hyphae penetrate the chitinous exoskeleton, their extensive proliferation in the epidermis, and their ability to invade deep tissues causing obvious pathological effects, are highly suggestive that it is a virulent, probably fatal, disease that may have a significant impact on tanner crab population dynamics. |
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Keywords: | Marine mycosis black mat syndrome histopathology tanner crab |
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