Morphological and molecular characterization of Eimeria haematopusi n. sp. (Apicomplexa: Eimeriidae) in an Australian Pied Oystercatcher (Haematopus longirostris) (Aves: Charadriiformes)
Jill M. Austen, Belinda Brice, Dandan Liu, Huimin Gao, Bruno P. Berto, Alireza Zahedi, Aileen Elloit, Rongchang Yang

TL;DR
A new species of coccidian parasite, Eimeria haematopusi, was identified in an Australian pied oystercatcher through morphological and molecular analysis.
Contribution
The paper describes and names a new Eimeria species based on both morphological and molecular data from a wild bird host.
Findings
The new Eimeria species has distinct morphological features including ellipsoidal oocysts with specific internal structures.
Molecular analysis showed high genetic similarity to Eimeria species found in wetland birds.
The parasite is named Eimeria haematopusi after its host, Haematopus longirostris.
Abstract
A novel Eimeria Schneider, 1875 species is described from an Australian pied oystercatcher Haematopus longirostris Vieillot, in Western Australia. The pied oystercatcher was admitted to the Kanyana Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre (KWRC), Perth, Western Australia in a poor body condition, abrasion to its right hock and signs of partial delamination to its lower beak. Investigation into potential medical causes resulted in a faecal sample being collected and screened for gastrointestinal parasites. Unsporulated coccidian oocysts were initially observed in the faeces and identified as Eimeria upon sporulation. The sporulated oocysts (n = 20) are ellipsoidal, 20–21 × 12–13 μm in shape and have thick bi-layered walls which are c.2/3 of the total thickness. Micropyle is present, robust and protruding, and occasionally has a rounded polar body attached to the micropyle. Within the oocyst, a…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsCoccidia and coccidiosis research · Parasitic Infections and Diagnostics · Helminth infection and control
