Brooklynella hostilis n. g., n. sp., a Pathogenic Cyrtophorine Ciliate in Marine Fishes*
Supported in part by NSF Research Grant GB 7013X to Dr. John O. Corliss, to whom the senior author is deeply indebted for the opportunity to use his research facilities.
Abstract
SYNOPSIS. Brooklynella hostilis is a new genus and new species of highly lethal Chilodonella-like parasite in the gills of marine fishes. It differs from other dysteriid ciliates by a combination of these features: 1) posterior-ventral adhesive apparatus consisting of a single glandular organelle that lacks a distinct discharging canal or podite; 2) the kinetosomes cover the entire ventral surface, except the left posterior portion of the body; the outer right kinety is divided into 2 segments; the middle postoral kinetyues as a row of kinetosomes without cilia around the glandular organelle; 3) there are never more than 9 nematodesmata; and 4), there are numerous small micronuclei. The lesions caused by the infection vary from a mild inflammatory reaction to extreme tissue damage resulting in severe hemorrhages, desquamation, and fusion of the gill lamellae.