Abstract

SummaryDisease resulting from infection by Zygomycetes fungi (including two groups of coenocytic fungal pathogens: the Mucormycota and the Entomophthoramycota) has been collectively referred to as zygomycosis. Clinical disease associated with both the Mucormycota and the Entomophthoramycota is rarely encountered in horses. Potentially life‐threatening, mucormycosis is an angioinvasive disease that principally affects immunocompromised individuals. The order of Entomophthorales include two genera: Conidiobolus and Basidiobolus. The most common of these, Conidiobolus coronatus, typically causes chronic necrohaemorrhagic tumefactions in the nostrils, nasal passages and nasopharyngeal walls of immunocompetent equine hosts, most commonly seen in the south‐eastern USA and parts of Australia. Infection by Basidiobolus ranarum is reported less frequently and usually causes solitary ulcerative skin lesions with pruritus. This short commentary intends to complement the accompanying review of conidiobolomycosis by summarising reported cases of mucormycosis and basidiobolomycosis in horses. Moreover, some new information regarding taxonomic challenges to traditional ‘Zygomycosis’ classification is presented.

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