A dinoflagellate with a life cycle that includes numerous flagellated, amoeboid, and encysted stages. Both the flagellated and amoeboid forms produce toxins which cause open wounds on fish. Pfiesteria piscicida feeds on tissue sloughed from these wounds, as well as on bacteria and algae. It is found in Atlantic estuaries of the United States.
Infections with unicellular organisms formerly members of the subkingdom Protozoa.
Small oviparous fishes in the family Cyprinodontidae, usually striped or barred black. They are much used in mosquito control.
Flagellate EUKARYOTES, found mainly in the oceans. They are characterized by the presence of transverse and longitudinal flagella which propel the organisms in a rotating manner through the water. Dinoflagellida were formerly members of the class Phytomastigophorea under the old five kingdom paradigm.
A genus of gram-negative, facultatively anaerobic, rod-shaped bacteria that are common in the marine environment and on the surfaces and in the intestinal contents of marine animals. Some species are bioluminescent and are found as symbionts in specialized luminous organs of fish.

Possible estuary-associated syndrome. (1/44)

Pfiesteria piscicida (Pp) is an estuarine dinoflagellate that has been associated with fish kill events in estuaries along the eastern seaboard and possibly with human health effects. CDC, in collaboration with other federal, state, and local government agencies and academic institutions, is conducting multistate surveillance, epidemiologic studies, and laboratory research for possible estuary-associated syndrome (PEAS), including possible Pp-related human illness.  (+info)

Reporter gene assay for fish-killing activity produced by Pfiesteria piscicida. (2/44)

Collaborative studies were performed to develop a functional assay for fish-killing activity produced by Pfiesteria piscicida. Eight cell lines were used to screen organic fractions and residual water fraction by using a 3-[4, 5-dimethylthiazol-(2-4)]-diphenyltetrazolium bromide cytotoxicity assay. Diethyl ether and a residual water fraction were cytotoxic to several cell lines including rat pituitary (GH(4)C(1)) cells. Residual water as well as preextracted culture water containing P. piscicida cells induced c-fos-luciferase expressed in GH(4)C(1) cells with a rapid time course of induction and sensitive detection. The reporter gene assay detected activity in toxic isolates of P. piscicida from several North Carolina estuaries in 1997 and 1998 and may also be suitable for detecting toxic activity in human and animal serum.  (+info)

Heteroduplex mobility assay-guided sequence discovery: elucidation of the small subunit (18S) rDNA sequences of Pfiesteria piscicida and related dinoflagellates from complex algal culture and environmental sample DNA pools. (3/44)

The newly described heterotrophic estuarine dinoflagellate Pfiesteria piscicida has been linked with fish kills in field and laboratory settings, and with a novel clinical syndrome of impaired cognition and memory disturbance among humans after presumptive toxin exposure. As a result, there is a pressing need to better characterize the organism and these associations. Advances in Pfiesteria research have been hampered, however, by the absence of genomic sequence data. We employed a sequencing strategy directed by heteroduplex mobility assay to detect Pfiesteria piscicida 18S rDNA "signature" sequences in complex pools of DNA and used those data as the basis for determination of the complete P. piscicida 18S rDNA sequence. Specific PCR assays for P. piscicida and other estuarine heterotrophic dinoflagellates were developed, permitting their detection in algal cultures and in estuarine water samples collected during fish kill and fish lesion events. These tools should enhance efforts to characterize these organisms and their ecological relationships. Heteroduplex mobility assay-directed sequence discovery is broadly applicable, and may be adapted for the detection of genomic sequence data of other novel or nonculturable organisms in complex assemblages.  (+info)

Surveillance for possible estuary-associated syndrome--six states, 1998-1999. (4/44)

Pfiesteria piscicida (Pp) is an alga that has been associated with fish kills in estuaries (where fresh water mixes with salty seawater) along the eastern seaboard and possibly with human health effects. Since June 1, 1998, surveillance for possible estuary-associated syndrome (PEAS), including possible Pp-related human illness, has been conducted in Delaware, Florida, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia. This report summarizes passive surveillance for PEAS during June 1, 1998-December 31, 1999, which indicated no persons had illnesses that met PEAS criteria.  (+info)

Development of real-time PCR assays for rapid detection of Pfiesteria piscicida and related dinoflagellates. (5/44)

Pfiesteria complex species are heterotrophic and mixotrophic dinoflagellates that have been recognized as harmful algal bloom species associated with adverse fish and human health effects along the East Coast of North America, particularly in its largest (Chesapeake Bay in Maryland) and second largest (Albermarle-Pamlico Sound in North Carolina) estuaries. In response to impacts on human health and the economy, monitoring programs to detect the organism have been implemented in affected areas. However, until recently, specific identification of the two toxic species known thus far, Pfiesteria piscicida and P. shumwayae (sp. nov.), required scanning electron microscopy (SEM). SEM is a labor-intensive process in which a small number of cells can be analyzed, posing limitations when the method is applied to environmental estuarine water samples. To overcome these problems, we developed a real-time PCR-based assay that permits rapid and specific identification of these organisms in culture and heterogeneous environmental water samples. Various factors likely to be encountered when assessing environmental samples were addressed, and assay specificity was validated through screening of a comprehensive panel of cultures, including the two recognized Pfiesteria species, morphologically similar species, and a wide range of other estuarine dinoflagellates. Assay sensitivity and sample stability were established for both unpreserved and fixative (acidic Lugol's solution)-preserved samples. The effects of background DNA on organism detection and enumeration were also explored, and based on these results, we conclude that the assay may be utilized to derive quantitative data. This real-time PCR-based method will be useful for many other applications, including adaptation for field-based technology.  (+info)

Skin ulcers in fish: Pfiesteria and other etiologies. (6/44)

Skin ulcers on fish are one of the most well-recognized indicators of polluted or otherwise stressed aquatic environments. In recent years, skin ulcer epidemics have been either experimentally or epidemiologically linked to exposure to a number of xenobiotic chemicals as well as to biotoxins. Some of these agents, such as toxins produced by the dinoflagellate alga Pfiesteria, have led to serious concerns about the health of aquatic ecosystems, such as estuaries along the east coast of the United States. However, a number of other risk factors besides Pfiesteria have been shown to damage epithelium and may also play important roles in skin ulcer pathogenesis. In addition, increasing evidence indicates that not only may skin damage occur via direct contact with toxins, but it may also be induced indirectly from physiological changes that result from exposure not only to toxins but also to other environmental stressors, such as pH and temperature extremes. The multifactorial pathways that operate at both the ecological and the organismal levels as well as the nonspecific response of the skin to insults make it very challenging to link epidemic skin ulcers to any single cause in natural aquatic populations. Consequently, using pathology to unequivocally identify the specific cause of a lesion (eg. Pfiesteria exposure) is not a valid approach. Only with an increased understanding of the basic mechanisms leading to skin damage (including development of specific biomarkers for specific toxins), along with a better understanding of ecological processes operating in these environments, will we be able to discern the relative importance of various risk factors in skin ulcer development.  (+info)

Estuary-associated syndrome in North Carolina: an occupational prevalence study. (7/44)

Atlantic coast estuaries recently have experienced fish kills and fish with lesions attributed to Pfiesteria piscicida and related dinoflagellates. Human health effects have been reported from laboratory exposure and from a 1997 Maryland fish kill. North Carolina has recorded Pfiesteria-related fish kill events over the past decade, but human health effects from environmental exposure have not been systematically investigated or documented here. At the request of the state health agency, comprehensive examinations were conducted in a cross-sectional prevalence study of watermen working where Pfiesteria exposure may occur: waters where diseased or stressed fish were reported from June to September 1997, and where Pfiesteria had been identified in the past. Controls worked on unaffected waterways. The study was conducted 3 months after the last documented Pfiesteria-related fish kill. The goal was to document any persistent health effects from recent or remote contact with fish kills, fish with lesions, or affected waterways, using the 1997 U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention case description for estuary-associated syndrome (EAS). Examinations included comprehensive medical, occupational, and environmental history, general medical, dermatologic, and neurologic examinations, vision testing, and neuropsychologic evaluations. Seventeen of 22 watermen working in affected waters and 11 of 21 in unaffected waters reported exposure to a fish kill or to fish with lesions. We found no pattern of abnormalities on medical, neurologic, neuropsychologic, or NES-2 evaluation. By history, one subject in each group met the EAS criteria, neither of whom had significant neuropsychological impairment when examined. Watermen from affected waterways had a significant reduction in visual contrast sensitivity (VCS) at the midspatial frequencies, but we did not identify a specific factor or exposure associated with this reduction. The cohorts did not differ in reported occupational exposure to solvents (qualitative) or to other neurotoxicants; however, exposure history was not sufficiently detailed to measure or control for solvent exposure. This small prevalence study in watermen, conducted 3 months after the last documented fish kill related to Pfiesteria, did not identify an increased risk of estuary-associated syndrome in those working on affected waterways. A significant difference between the estuary and ocean watermen was found on VCS, which could not be attributed to any specific factor or exposure. VCS may be affected by chemicals, drugs, alcohol, and several developmental and degenerative conditions; it has not been validated as being affected by known exposure to dinoflagellate secretions. VCS should be considered for inclusion in further studies, together with documentation or quantification of its potential confounders, to assess whether it has utility in relationship to dinoflagellate exposure.  (+info)

Identification of a P2X7 receptor in GH(4)C(1) rat pituitary cells: a potential target for a bioactive substance produced by Pfiesteria piscicida. (8/44)

We examined the pharmacologic activity of a putative toxin (pPfTx) produced by Pfiesteria piscicida by characterizing the signaling pathways that induce the c-fos luciferase construct in GH(4)C(1) rat pituitary cells. Adenosine-5'-triphosphate (ATP) was determined to increase and, at higher concentrations, decrease luciferase activity in GH(4)C(1) rat pituitary cells that stably express c-fos luciferase. The inhibition of luciferase results from cytotoxicity, characteristic of the putative P. piscicida toxin (pPfTx). The actions of both pPfTx and ATP to induce c-fos luciferase were inhibited by the purinogenic receptor antagonist pyridoxalphosphate-6-azophenyl-2',4'-disulfonic acid (PPADS). Further characterization of a P2X receptor on the GH(4)C(1) cell was determined by the analog selectivity of P2X agonists. The P2X1/P2X3 agonist alpha,beta-methylene ATP (alpha,beta-MeATP) failed to increase or decrease c-fos luciferase. However, the P2X7 agonist 2',3'-(4-benzoyl)benzoyl ATP (BzATP), which had a predominant cytotoxic effect, was more potent than ATP. Immunoblot analysis of GH(4)C(1) cell membranes confirmed the presence of a 70-kDa protein that was immunoreactive to an antibody directed against the carboxy-terminal domain unique to the P2X7 receptor. The P2X7 irreversible antagonist oxidized-ATP (oxATP) inhibited the action of ATP, BzATP, and pPfTx. These findings indicate that GH(4)C(1) cells express purinogenic receptors with selectivity consistent with the P2X7 subtype and that this receptor pathway mediates the induction of the c-fos luciferase reporter gene by ATP and the putative Pfiesteria toxin  (+info)

"Pfiesteria piscicida" is a species of microscopic, potentially toxic algae (dinoflagellate) that can cause harmful impacts to marine life and humans. It was first identified in the late 1980s in estuarine waters along the Atlantic coast of the United States. This species has a complex life cycle involving several distinct morphological stages, including both free-living cells and colonies that attach to surfaces.

Pfiesteria piscicida is capable of producing potent toxins that can affect the central nervous system, skin, and gills of fish, leading to mass mortalities in affected areas. The algae can also negatively impact other marine organisms, such as zooplankton and shellfish. In humans, exposure to Pfiesteria piscicida or its toxins can cause a variety of health effects, including skin irritation, respiratory issues, and cognitive impairments. However, more research is needed to fully understand the potential human health impacts associated with this species.

It's important to note that Pfiesteria piscicida is not always toxic, and its toxicity seems to be related to specific environmental conditions and life cycle stages. Nonetheless, due to its potential for causing harm, it is closely monitored in areas where it has been found, and research continues to better understand its ecology, biology, and impacts on marine ecosystems and human health.

Protozoan infections are diseases caused by microscopic, single-celled organisms known as protozoa. These parasites can enter the human body through contaminated food, water, or contact with an infected person or animal. Once inside the body, they can multiply and cause a range of symptoms depending on the type of protozoan and where it infects in the body. Some common protozoan infections include malaria, giardiasis, amoebiasis, and toxoplasmosis. Symptoms can vary widely but may include diarrhea, abdominal pain, fever, fatigue, and skin rashes. Treatment typically involves the use of antiprotozoal medications to kill the parasites and alleviate symptoms.

I'm sorry for any confusion, but "killifishes" is not a term used in medical definitions. Killifishes are a type of small, freshwater or saltwater fish that belong to the family Cyprinodontidae. They are known for their bright colors and patterns, and are often kept as aquarium pets. If you have any questions about biology or animal species, I'd be happy to try to help answer them!

Dinoflagellida is a large group of mostly marine planktonic protists, many of which are bioluminescent. Some dinoflagellates are responsible for harmful algal blooms (HABs), also known as "red tides," which can produce toxins that affect marine life and human health.

Dinoflagellates are characterized by two flagella, or whip-like structures, that they use for movement. They have complex cell structures, including a unique structure called the nucleomorph, which is the remnant of a former endosymbiotic event where another eukaryotic cell was engulfed and became part of the dinoflagellate's cell.

Dinoflagellates are important contributors to the marine food chain, serving as both primary producers and consumers. Some species form symbiotic relationships with other marine organisms, such as corals, providing them with nutrients in exchange for protection and other benefits.

"Photobacterium" is a genus of Gram-negative, facultatively anaerobic bacteria that are capable of producing light, a phenomenon known as bioluminescence. These bacteria are commonly found in marine environments and are often associated with fish and other sea creatures. They are typically rod-shaped and can exist as free-living organisms or as symbiotic partners within host organisms. Photobacterium species are known to produce a variety of enzymes and metabolites that have potential applications in biotechnology and medicine. However, some strains of Photobacterium can cause infections in humans, particularly in individuals with weakened immune systems.

... is a dinoflagellate species of the genus Pfiesteria that some researchers claim was responsible for many ... Lovko, Vincent J. (2008) Pathogenicity of the Purportedly Toxic Dinoflagellates Pfiesteria Piscicida and Pseudopfiesteria ... 2002). "Are Pfiesteria species toxicogenic? Evidence against production of ichthyotoxins by Pfiesteria shumwayae". Proc. Natl. ... "Pfiesteria toxin breakthrough subject of teleconference briefing". Retrieved 2008-01-06. Report on Pfiesteria and Related ...
"Pfiesteria piscicida gen. et sp. nov. (Pfiesteriaceae fam. nov.), a new toxic dinoflagellate with a complex life cycle and ... State University researchers JoAnn Burkholder and Edward Noga discovered a new dinoflagellate genus which they named Pfiesteria ...
Miller TR, Belas R (2003). "Pfiesteria piscicida, P. shumwayae, and other Pfiesteria-like dinoflagellates". Res. Microbiol. 154 ... Pfiesteria piscicida (from Latin Pisces, fish; cida, killer.), which has a complex life cycle and the species Pfiesteria ... The type locality of Pfiesteria piscicida is Pamlico River Estuary, North Carolina, U.S.A. Early research resulted in the ... In early 2007, a highly unstable toxin produced by the toxic form of Pfiesteria piscicida was identified. Human illness: The ...
Pfiesteria piscicida "Protozoa Infecting Gills and Skin". The Merck Veterinary Manual. Archived from the original on 3 March ...
Miller TR, Belas R (2003). "Pfiesteria piscicida, P. shumwayae, and other Pfiesteria-like dinoflagellates". Res. Microbiol. 154 ... Although closely resembling Pfiesteria piscicida, it differs in two important precingular plates 5" and 6", which historically ... Pseudopfiesteria shumwayae has been described as having a less complex life cycle than Pfiesteria piscicida. While toxic ... Pfiesteria has a worldwide distribution and is typically found in estuaries and coastal habitats. It is usually benign unless ...
It is caused by the ambush predator dinoflagellate Pfiesteria piscicida. When large numbers of fish, like shoaling forage fish ... Magnien RE (2001) "The Dynamics of Science, Perception, and Policy during the Outbreak of Pfiesteria in the Chesapeake Bay" ...
It is caused by the ambush predator dinoflagellate Pfiesteria piscicida. When large numbers of fish, like shoaling forage fish ... Magnien, RE (2001). "The Dynamics of Science, Perception, and Policy during the Outbreak of Pfiesteria in the Chesapeake Bay". ... in the gill of a chinook salmon The parasite Henneguya zschokkei in salmon beard Skin ulcers in tilapia exposed to Pfiesteria ...
In addition, for the zygotic cysts of Pfiesteria piscicida dormancy was not essential. One of the most striking features of ... Parrow, Matthew W.; Burkholder, Joann M. (2004). "The Sexual Life Cycles of Pfiesteria Piscicida and Cryptoperidiniopsoids ( ... Some colorless dinoflagellates may also form toxic blooms, such as Pfiesteria. Some dinoflagellate blooms are not dangerous. ... Oodinium and Pfiesteria). Some dinoflagellates produce resting stages, called dinoflagellate cysts or dinocysts, as part of ...
One particularly harmful source of toxicity is Pfiesteria piscicida, which can affect both fish and humans. Pfiesteria caused a ...
For example, runoff from farms in Maryland and North Carolina are a leading candidate for Pfiesteria piscicida. This ... Pfiesteria piscicida (neurological damage) Antibiotics are fed to livestock to prevent disease and to increase weight and ...
... and how Pfiesteria piscicida could be the first plague; Richard Wassersug of Dalhousie University in Canada, and a plague of ...
Lovko, Vincent J. (2008) Pathogenicity of the Purportedly Toxic Dinoflagellates Pfiesteria Piscicida and Pseudopfiesteria ...
Pfiesteria piscicida, and Stoeckeria algicida, and some bacteria. It often eats the coccolithophore Cricosphaera elongata, and ...
The dinoflagellate Pfiesteria piscicida is present in the river, and has a bloom in growth when nutrient levels are increased ... Neuse River Foundation Pfiesteria, USDA Facts about Pfiesteria, NCDENR Wikimedia Commons has media related to Neuse River. ... Neuse River Foundation Pfiesteria Archived 2007-03-11 at the Wayback Machine, About the Neuse, ...
The spill also contributed to an outbreak of Pfiesteria piscicida, which caused health problems in nearby humans, including ...
She was responsible for identifying the cause, a dinoflagellate Pfiesteria piscicida and its toxins, of mass deaths of fish ... and found that the cause of that and deaths in North Carolina rivers were due to a dinoflagellate Pfiesteria piscicida which ... The fish-killing forms of Pfiesteria tended to be associated with high nutrient flows into waters from agricultural and urban ... Burkholder, Joann M; Glasgow, Howard B (1999). "Science Ethics and its Role in Early Suppression of the Pfiesteria Issue". ...
In the 1990s, a microorganism outbreak on the lower river, possibly Pfiesteria piscicida, led to widespread fish kills and ...
... pfiesteria piscicida MeSH B01.500.841.750.443.575.250 - euglenida MeSH B01.500.841.750.443.575.250.320 - euglena MeSH B01.500. ...
Pfiesteria shumwayae Pfiesteria piscicida The media has applied the term carnivorous or predatory algae mainly to Pfiesteria ... Pfiesteria shumwayae and other Pfiesteria-like dinoflagellates implicated in harmful algal blooms and fish kills. Pfiesteria is ... Pfiesteria piscicida (Latin: fish killer) has been blamed for killing more than one billion fish in the Neuse and Pamlico river ... "The Fuss Over Pfiesteria". Archived from the original on 2008-02-02. Retrieved 2008-01-05. Morris JG (1999). "Pfiesteria, "the ...
Genus of protozoans Pfiesteria piscicida - Toxic dinoflagellate species Viruses Pathogens which may be transmitted between ...
Pfiesteria piscicida is a dinoflagellate species of the genus Pfiesteria that some researchers claim was responsible for many ... Lovko, Vincent J. (2008) Pathogenicity of the Purportedly Toxic Dinoflagellates Pfiesteria Piscicida and Pseudopfiesteria ... 2002). "Are Pfiesteria species toxicogenic? Evidence against production of ichthyotoxins by Pfiesteria shumwayae". Proc. Natl. ... "Pfiesteria toxin breakthrough subject of teleconference briefing". Retrieved 2008-01-06. Report on Pfiesteria and Related ...
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PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHTHIRUS. ...
Pfiesteria; Pfiesteria piscicida; fish toxin; neurobehavioral effects; memory loss; fish biologists ... an investigation was begun into possible exposures to the dinoflagellate Pfiesteria-piscicida during work activities. The ... A well was the source of the water supply for the Warm Springs hatchery; P-piscicida was not known to inhabit wells or inland ... The study indicated that at this time the employees are unlikely to come into contact with P- piscicida contaminated water or ...
3. In vitro evaluation of the effectiveness of the macrolide rokitamycin against Pfiesteria piscicida ...
Amnesiac Shellfish Poisoning (ASP): Pfiesteria piscicida kills fish. (N Carolina, Maryland, Virginia); causes memory loss in ... Pfiesteria piscida, cell from hell: predator microbe has 24 life stages, from green plant to predator. Dangerous to humans too ...
Pfiesteria piscicida Actions. * Search in PubMed * Search in MeSH * Add to Search ... A novel toxicosis, caused by Pfiesteria spp. dinoflagellates, has become a secondary problem in some areas where large fish ...
of the toxin produced by the fish-killing alga Pfiesteria piscicida.. "Im on antibiotics 120 days a year, and Ive had 13 ...
The culprit was a toxic microbe called Pfiesteria piscicida, which was flourishing in the warm, polluted waterways. The one- ... A leap of the imagination? Perhaps, but for those who recall the pfiesteria scare, its haunting to see infected striped bass ...
... piscicida or MRO toxicity; or 3) a fish kill involving fish without lesions, if P. piscicida or MROs are present and there is ... CDC sponsored a workshop to coordinate a multistate response to public health issues about Pfiesteria piscicida. Workshop ... P. piscicida and morphologically related organisms (MROs) are dinoflagellates that have been implicated in recent estuarine * ... Notice to Readers Results of The Public Health Response to Pfiesteria Workshop -- Atlanta, Georgia, September 29-30, 1997 MMWR ...
Human Health Risks of Exposure to Pfiesteria piscicida BioScience * 2001 Human health effects and Pfiesteria exposure: A ... Learning and memory difficulties after environmental exposure to waterways containing toxin-producing Pfiesteria or Pfiesteria- ... Learning and memory difficulties after environmental exposure to waterways containing toxin-producing Pfiesteria or Pfiesteria- ... Learning and memory difficulties after environmental exposure to waterways containing toxin-producing Pfiesteria or Pfiesteria- ...
In 2003, no state-reported closings or advisories were issued due to high Pfiesteria piscicida levels.[2] On June 6, 2002 the ... Exposure to Pfiesteria piscicida blooms may result in short-term memory loss, dizziness, muscular aches, peripheral tingling, ... In 1997, Maryland closed several rivers tributary to the Chesapeake Bay where Pfiesteria piscicida was found in high ...
Boesch chaired an expert panel tasked with determining if there was any linkage between the outbreaks of Pfiesteria piscicida ... And scientists even differed on whether pfiesteria or another aquatic microorganism was killing fish. ...
PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. P-GLYCOPROTEIN. P-GLICOPROTEINA. GLICOPROTEÍNA P. ...
Pfiesteria piscicida Preferred Term Term UI T059708. Date01/01/1999. LexicalTag NON. ThesaurusID NLM (1999). ... Pfiesteria piscicida Preferred Concept UI. M0029756. Registry Number. txid71001. Scope Note. A dinoflagellate with a life cycle ... Pfiesteria piscicida feeds on tissue sloughed from these wounds, as well as on bacteria and algae. It is found in Atlantic ... Pfiesteria piscicida feeds on tissue sloughed from these wounds, as well as on bacteria and algae. It is found in Atlantic ...
Pfiesteria piscicida Preferred Term Term UI T059708. Date01/01/1999. LexicalTag NON. ThesaurusID NLM (1999). ... Pfiesteria piscicida Preferred Concept UI. M0029756. Registry Number. txid71001. Scope Note. A dinoflagellate with a life cycle ... Pfiesteria piscicida feeds on tissue sloughed from these wounds, as well as on bacteria and algae. It is found in Atlantic ... Pfiesteria piscicida feeds on tissue sloughed from these wounds, as well as on bacteria and algae. It is found in Atlantic ...
Pfiesteria piscicida. *Saxitoxin. *Symbiodinium. *Velvet (fish disease). Zooplankton. *Chaetognatha. *Ciguatera. *Ctenophora. * ...
PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHTHIRUS. ...
PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. P-GLYCOPROTEIN. P-GLICOPROTEINA. GLICOPROTEÍNA P. ...
PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHTHIRUS. ...
PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHTHIRUS. ...
PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHTHIRUS. ...
PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHTHIRUS. ...
PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHTHIRUS. ...
PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHTHIRUS. ...
PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. P-GLICOPROTEINA. P-GLYCOPROTEIN. GLICOPROTEÍNA P. ...
PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHTHIRUS. ...
PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PFIESTERIA PISCICIDA. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHANEROCHAETE. PHTHIRUS. ...
Pfiesteria piscicida (organism). Code System Preferred Concept Name. Pfiesteria piscicida (organism). Concept Status. Published ...

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