Filipodium
Filipodium is a genus of parasites in the phylum Apicomplexa. Species in this genus infect marine invertebrates.
Filipodium | |
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Scientific classification | |
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Infraphylum: | Dinozoa |
Class: | Squirmidea[1] |
Order: | Squirmida |
Family: | Filipodiidae |
Genus: | Filipodium Hukui 1939 |
Species | |
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This genus was described by Hukui in 1939.[2]
Taxonomy
The type species is Filipodium ozakai.
Description
The mucron is broadly funnel-shaped with papillae around its rim. The gamonts are elongate, with longitudinal striations and with many protrusible filaments emerging from beneath the pellicle. The gametocysts have numerous oocysts. The gametes are dissimilar: the male gametes are not flagellated. The oocysts are ellipsoidal or ovoid and have 8 sporozoites.
Life cycle
The species infects sipunculid worms.
The parasite infects the gastrointestinal tract and is presumably transmitted by the orofaecal route but the details of this mechanism are presently unknown.
Host record
- F. ozakii — Siphonosoma kumanense
References
- Cavalier-Smith, Thomas (2014). "Gregarine site-heterogeneous 18S rDNA trees, revision of gregarine higher classification, and the evolutionary diversification of Sporozoa". European Journal of Protistology. 50 (5): 472–495. doi:10.1016/j.ejop.2014.07.002. PMID 25238406.
- Hukui (1939). "On the gregarines from Siphonosoma kumanense (Kefer-stein), Spengel". J Sci Hiroshima Uni Zool. 7: 1–23.
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