Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/75153
Título: Skin infection of greater amberjack (Seriola dumerili) by monogenean ectoparasite neobenedenia girellae: A morphological and histopathological descriptive study
Autores/as: Fernández Montero, Álvaro 
Montero, D. 
Izquierdo, M. S. 
Acosta, F. 
Caballero, M. J. 
Torrecillas, S. 
Clasificación UNESCO: 251092 Acuicultura marina
Palabras clave: Aquaculture
Ectoparasite
Epithelium
Fish
Histopathology
Fecha de publicación: 2020
Publicación seriada: Aquaculture Reports 
Resumen: Neobenedenia girellae is considered an epizootic infection for intensively cultured fish species. Particularly, for greater amberjack (Seriola dumerili) N. girellae causes high mortality rates and supposes a bottleneck during its on-growing period. Thus, the objective of this work was to describe the skin morphological alterations caused by a N. girellae infection on greater amberjack. Greater amberjack juveniles were sampled pre and post experimental infection with N. girellae obtaining cranial and dorsal skin samples. Samples were processed for morphological and ultrastructural studies and revealed clear differences in the structure of both regions, confirming the cranial region as the most susceptible region to be parasitized due to an absence of scales and lower goblet cells density. N. girellae adhesion disrupted the structure of epidermal epithelial cells by overpressure. Stratum spongiosum surface-epithelial cells located near the parasite presented a clear cell degradation process, associated in some cases with cellular detachment. N. girellae infection induced epidermal hydropic degeneration and, in some cases, focal spongiosis. Tissue ulcerative lesions caused by the parasite's attachment structures were characterized by a specific mobilization of leucocytes to the fixation areas. Thus, N.girellae induces important alterations in greater amberjack epidermis independently of the skin region that explain the appearance of secondary infections and associated mortalities.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/75153
ISSN: 2352-5134
DOI: 10.1016/j.aqrep.2020.100505
Fuente: Aquaculture Reports [EISSN 2352-5134], v. 18, 100505 (Noviembre 2020)
Colección:Artículos
miniatura
PDF
Adobe PDF (16,98 MB)
Vista completa

Citas SCOPUSTM   

5
actualizado el 21-abr-2024

Visitas

149
actualizado el 13-abr-2024

Descargas

119
actualizado el 13-abr-2024

Google ScholarTM

Verifica

Altmetric


Comparte



Exporta metadatos



Los elementos en ULPGC accedaCRIS están protegidos por derechos de autor con todos los derechos reservados, a menos que se indique lo contrario.