Abstract

The fan mussel, Pinna nobilis, represents the largest bivalve endemic to the Mediterranean Sea. Since 2016, dramatic mass mortality of this species has been observed in several areas. The first surveys suggested that Haplosporidium pinnae (currently considered species-specific) was the main etiological agent, but recent studies have indicated that a multifactorial disease may be responsible for this phenomenon. In this study, we performed molecular diagnostic analyses on P. nobilis, P. rudis, and bivalve heterologous host species from the island of Sardinia to shed further light on the pathogens involved in the mass mortality. The results support the occurrence of a multifactorial disease and that Mycobacterium spp. and H. pinnae are not necessarily associated with the illness. Indeed, our analyses revealed that H. pinnae is not species-specific for P. nobilis, as it was present in other bivalves at least three years before the mass mortality began, and species of Mycobacterium were also found in healthy individuals of P. nobilis and P. rudis. We also detected the species Rhodococcus erythropolis, representing the first report in fan mussels of a bacterium other than Mycobacterium spp. and Vibrio spp. These results depict a complicated scenario, further demonstrating how the P. nobilis mass mortality event is far from being fully understood.

Highlights

  • The fan mussel, Pinna nobilis Linnaeus, 1758 (Bivalvia: Pinnidae), is one of the best-known marine invertebrates, representing an endemic flagship species for the Mediterranean Sea.The fan mussel is one of the largest bivalves in the world and the largest in the Mediterranean, reaching up to 120 cm in height [1], and it is one of the most long-lived, living up to 50 years in favorable conditions [2]

  • A large number of infected fan mussels made it possible to test for differences between the occurrence of the signs of disease and the presence of H. pinnae in the tissues of individuals using the Pearson’s Chi-squared test

  • Our results support the occurrence of a multifactorial disease as a possible explanation for the mass mortality of P. nobilis, as Mycobacterium spp. and H. pinnae are not always associated with the illness

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Summary

Introduction

The fan mussel (or noble pen shell), Pinna nobilis Linnaeus, 1758 (Bivalvia: Pinnidae), is one of the best-known marine invertebrates, representing an endemic flagship species for the Mediterranean Sea. The fan mussel is one of the largest bivalves in the world and the largest in the Mediterranean, reaching up to 120 cm in height [1], and it is one of the most long-lived, living up to 50 years in favorable conditions [2]. Pinna nobilis lives at depths between 0.5 and 60 m on soft bottoms overgrown by seagrass meadows [3] and occasionally on the bare sandy substrate and maerl beds [4]. The larval duration for the genus Pinna has been estimated to be a maximum of 10 days [4,6]. After the veliger stage in which the larvae drift in the water column [7], juveniles settle in the sediment, anchoring via a byssus [6]

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