Abstract
Members of the myxozoan genus Kudoa (Myxosporea: Multivalvulida: Kudoidae) are characterized as having four or more shell valves in a myxospore, with a corresponding number of polar capsules. Certain Kudoa spp. are critical pathogens in fish, causing postmortem myoliquefaction, unmarketable fish musculature due to unsightly macroscopic cysts, and reduced aquaculture production due to the outbreaks of neurological symptoms or cardiac diseases. Molecular genetic techniques have enabled the differentiation of Kudoa spp. with morphologically similar myxospores. In the present study, we employed integrated taxonomic approaches on five Kudoa spp. forming cysts between the trunk muscle myofibers (K. bora from Osteomugil perusii and K. lutjanus from Acanthopagrus latus), or cysts in the gallbladder wall (K. petala from Sillago sihama), and pseudocysts in the trunk muscle myofibers (K. uncinata from Nuchequula nuchalis and K. fujitai n. sp. from O. perusii). These four host fishes, which originated in the South China Sea, were purchased in the wet markets in Zhanjiang City, Guangdong Province, China, between August 2016 and April 2018. We have redescribed the four Kudoa spp. (K. bora, K. lutjanus, K. petala, and K. uncinata) on which little data are available after their original descriptions. Particularly, genetic characterization of K. bora and K. lutjanus, which are known to have myxospores morphologically similar to those of K. iwatai, was performed based on the nuclear ribosomal RNA gene and partial mitochondrial DNA genes such as cytochrome c oxidase subunit I and small and large ribosomal genes, demonstrating the validity and independence of these three kudoid species. We also provide description of a new species-K. fujitai n. sp.-in the present study. Application of integrated taxonomic approaches to known species characterized solely based on morphological criteria, as well as unknown species (e.g., K. fujitai n. sp. in the present study), contributes to better understanding of the biodiversity of Kudoa and multivalvulid myxosporeans.
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