Abstract

The fungus Mucor circinelloides was isolated from a platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus) suffering from ulcerative mycosis. On horse blood agar at 20, 25 and 30 degrees C, the fungus formed sphaerule-like bodies, a morphology previously associated with Mucor amphibiorum, the species thought to be responsible for the disease in platypus. A biopsy taken from the ulcer was fixed, cut and stained. The sections were compared with sections taken from other platypuses suffering from ulcerative mycosis, and from which M. amphibiorum had been isolated. There were no discernible differences between the sphaerule-like bodies found in any of the sections. The presence of sphaerule-like bodies in tissues of ulcerated animals can, therefore, probably no longer be relied upon as a definitive method for the diagnosis of M. amphibiorum infection. It is possible that M. circinelloides is either a primary or a secondary pathogen of platypuses, and further work is required to resolve this point. The isolate of M. circinelloides grew at temperatures up to 38 degrees C, with an optimum temperature for growth of 30 degrees C. Of six isolates of M. amphibiorum derived from both platypus and amphibians, two grew well at 38 degrees C. The growth of one of these isolates at elevated temperatures may be explained by the hot climate of the area in Queensland in which it was found. All of the isolates tested had maximum temperatures for growth in excess of the body temperature of platypuses (32 degrees C).

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