Myxobolus cerebralis is a myxosporean parasite of salmonids. It causes whirling disease in farmed salmon and trout and also in wild fish populations. Whirling disease afflicts juvenile fish and causes skeletal deformation and neurological damage. The parasite is not transmissible to humans.
About Myxobolus cerebralis in brief

Recent molecular studies suggest they are related to Bilateria or Cnidaria, with Cnodaria being closer morphologically because both groups have extrusive filaments. In the 1980s, M. cerebralis was discovered to require a tubificid oligoch aete to complete its life cycle. It has a two-host-host life cycle involving a salmon-host cycle involving two life cycles involving two salmon species. It is not known if the parasite has a life-cycle involving a fish-host cycle involving two fish species, or a salmon host and two fish hosts, or two salmon nervous systems. It can be found in Europe, the U.S., South Africa, Canada, Canada and other countries and has appeared in most of Europe, the United States, South Africa and South Africa as well as wild fish in the wild. The mortality rate is high for fingerlings, up to 90% of infected populations, and those that do survive are deformed by the parasites residing in their cartilage and bone. They act as a reservoir for the parasite, which is released into water following the fish’s death. The parasites are not transmissible to humans, though some studies have found them to be related to cnidarians, a group of organisms that are more closely related tobilateria and Bilaterian. The myxospores develop from sporoplasms inside fish hosts, are lenticular.
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This page is based on the article Myxobolus cerebralis published in Wikipedia (as of Nov. 20, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






