Department of Environmental & Aquatic Animal Health - Research
Programs & Projects
Shellfish
Pathology Laboratory
Program
Overview
Since the late 1950s oyster populations of Chesapeake Bay
have been significantly impacted by two oyster pathogens: Haplosporidium
nelsoni, the causative agent of
MSX disease, and Perkinsus
marinus, the causative agent of
perkinsosis or Dermo. These protozoan parasites
have caused severe mortalities in Chesapeake Bay oyster populations,
contributing to their decline and hindering their restoration. Scientists at
VIMS have been studying these parasites since their discovery. Today, the VIMS
Shellfish Pathology Laboratory continues research on these and other shellfish
disease agents so that we may better understand the biology of these pathogens
and use that information to mitigate effects on regional shellfish populations
and industries.
Our current research focuses on native oyster pathogens H.
nelsoni, H. costale (seaside organism, SSO), and P.
marinus; hard clam parasite QPX (Quahog Parasite Unknown); and
on the known and potential disease agents of the Asian oyster species Crassostrea
ariakensis, including Bonamia spp. We have specific interests in:
- Developing molecular diagnostic methods for parasite
detection.
- Applying molecular tools to determine environmental
reservoirs for parasites.
- Understanding environmental influences on the
distribution and abundance of shellfish pathogens.
- Determining parasite life cycles and transmission
dynamics.
- Understanding the genetic basis in shellfish of disease
susceptibility and resistance.
In addition to our research programs, our laboratory also monitors
the distribution and abundance of oyster and clam diseases in Virginia,
provides shellfish
health examinations for industry, and
serves as the world’s OIE
Reference Laboratory for Perkinsus and Haplosporidian shellfish pathogens.
Current
and Recent Research
Infectivity and transmissibility to Crassostrea
ariakensis of pathogenic Bonamia sp. from Ostrea equestris:
Evaluation of crested oysters as a parasite reservoir. R.B. Carnegie, E.M.
Burreson and C. Audemard. Virginia Sea Grant. 2005-2007.
Examination of the Potential for Vertical and Horizontal
Transmission of the Oyster Herpes Virus from Crassostrea ariakensis
Broodstock. K.S. Reece, R.B. Carnegie, E.M. Burreson, and C. Dungan (Maryland
Department of Natural Resources). Virginia Sea Grant. 2005-2007.
Pathogenic Bonamia sp. from North Carolina: Field and
laboratory trials to characterize potential risks to C. ariakensis in
the mid-Atlantic region. E.M. Burreson, R.B. Carnegie, C. Audemard, and C.
Peterson and M. Bishop (University of North Carolina Institute of Marine
Sciences). NOAA Chesapeake Bay Office. 2004-2005.
Potential for Crassostrea ariakensis to serve as a
vector for exotic pathogens in Chesapeake Bay: Assessing the risk of Perkinsus
spp. and oyster herpes virus to C. ariakensis and native bivalves. K.S.
Reece, E.M. Burreson, R.B. Carnegie, and C. Dungan (Maryland Department of
Natural Resources). NOAA Chesapeake Bay Office. 2004-2006.
Determination of the natural host for Bonamia sp. in
North Carolina, and evaluation of the potential for infection of Crassostrea
ariakensis in Virginia. R.B. Carnegie and E.M. Burreson. Virginia Sea
Grant. 2004
Susceptibility of Crassostrea ariakensis to the
oyster pathogen Bonamia ostreae to Bonamia sp. recently
discovered in C. ariakensis in North Carolina. E.M. Burreson, C.
Audemard, and R.B. Carnegie. Maryland Department of Natural Resources.
2004-2005
Publications
Annual
Monitoring Reports
Carnegie, R. and E.M. Burreson. 2006. Status of the major oyster
diseases in Virginia—2005. A summary of the annual monitoring program.
Virginia Institute of Marine Science Marine Resource Report.
Carnegie, R. and E.M. Burreson. 2005. Status of the major oyster
diseases in Virginia—2004. A summary of the annual monitoring program.
Virginia Institute of Marine Science Marine Resource Report.
Carnegie, R., L. Ragone Calvo, and E.M. Burreson. 2004. Status of the major oyster
diseases in Virginia—2003. A summary of the annual monitoring program.
Virginia Institute of Marine Science Marine Resource Report.
Ragone Calvo, L. and E.M. Burreson. 2003. Status of the major oyster
diseases in Virginia—2002. A summary of the annual monitoring program.
Virginia Institute of Marine Science Marine Resource Report, 2003-.
Ragone Calvo, L. and E.M. Burreson. 2002. Status of the major oyster
diseases in Virginia—2001. A summary of the annual monitoring program.
Virginia Institute of Marine Science Marine Resource Report, 2002-1.
Ragone Calvo, L. and E.M. Burreson. 2001. Status of the major oyster
diseases in Virginia—2000. A summary of the annual monitoring program.
Virginia Institute of Marine Science Marine Resource Report, 01-08.
Ragone Calvo, L. and E.M. Burreson. 2000. Status of the major oyster
diseases in Virginia—1999. A summary of the annual monitoring program.
Virginia Institute of Marine Science Marine Resource Report, 00-2.
Ragone Calvo, L. and E.M. Burreson. 1999. Status of the major oyster
diseases in Virginia—1998. A summary of the annual monitoring program.
Virginia Institute of Marine Science Marine Resource Report, 99-3.
Peer
Reviewed Journal Articles
Van Dover, C.L., M.E. Ward, J. Underdown, M.A. Whalen, C.A. Gustafson, B.
Anderson, J. Scott, and R.B. Carnegie. 2007. A fungal epizootic in mussels at
a deep-sea hydrothermal vent. Marine Ecology 28: 54-62.
Bishop, M.J., R.B. Carnegie, N.A. Stokes, C.H. Peterson, and E.M. Burreson.
2006. Predicting the outcome of a non-native oyster introduction: facilitation
of an enzootic parasite. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 325: 145-152.
Hare, M.P., S.K. Allen, Jr., P. Bloomer, M.D. Camara, R.B. Carnegie, J.
Murfree, M. Luckenbach, D. Meritt, C. Morrison, K. Paynter, K.S. Reece, and
C.G. Rose. 2006. A genetic test for recruitment enhancement in Chesapeake Bay
oysters, Crassostrea virginica, after population supplementation with a
disease tolerant strain. Conservation Genetics 7: 717-734.
Camara, M.D., S.K. Allen, Jr., R.B. Carnegie, and K.S. Reece. 2006.
Out-crossing among commercial strains of the northern quahog, Mercenaria
mercenaria: Survival, growth, and implications for selective breeding.
Journal of Shellfish Research 25(2): 403-416.
Carnegie, R.B., E.M. Burreson, P.M. Hine, N.A. Stokes, C. Audemard, M.J.
Bishop, and C.H. Peterson. 2006. Bonamia perspora n. sp. (Haplosporidia), a
parasite of the oyster Ostreola equestris, is the first Bonamia species known
to produce spores. Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology 53(4): 232-245.
Audemard, C., L. M. Ragone Calvo, K. T. Paynter, K. S. Reece, E. M.
Burreson. 2006. Real-time PCR investigation of parasite ecology: in situ
determination of oyster parasite Perkinsus marinus transmission
dynamics in lower Chesapeake Bay. Parasitology 132: 827-842.
Moss, J. A., E. M. Burreson, and K. S. Reece. 2006. Advanced Perkinsus
marinus infections in Crassostrea ariakensis maintained under
laboratory conditions. Journal of Shellfish Research 25(1): 65-72.
Azevedo, C., P Balseiro, G. Casal, C. Gestal, R. Aranguren, N.A. Stokes,
R.B. Carnegie, B. Novoa, E.M. Burreson, and A. Figueras. 2006. Ultrastructural
and molecular characterization of Haplosporidium montforti n. sp.,
parasite of the European abalone Haliotis tuberculata. Journal of
Invertebrate Pathology 92: 23-32.
Johnson, P.T.J., J.E. Longcore, D.E. Stanton, R.B. Carnegie, J.D. Shields,
and E.R. Preu. 2006. Chytrid fungal infections of Daphnia pulicaria:
development, ecology, pathology and phylogeny of Polycaryum laeve.
Freshwater Biology 51: 634-648.
Burreson, E.M., K.S. Reece, and C.F. Dungan. 2005. Molecular,
morphological, and experimental evidence support the synonymy of Perkinsus
chesapeaki and Perkinsus andrewsi. Journal of Eukaryotic
Microbiology 52: 258-270.
Meyer, G.R., S.M. Bower, and R.B. Carnegie. 2005.
Sensitivity of a digoxigenin-labelled DNA probe in detecting Mikrocytos
mackini, causative agent of Denman Island Disease (mikrocytosis) in
oysters. Journal of Invertebrate Pathology 88: 89-94.
Reece, K.S., M.E. Siddall, N.A. Stokes, and E.M. Burreson.
2004. Molecular phylogeny of the Haplosporidia based on two independent gene
sequences. Journal of Parasitology 90 (5): 1111-1122.
Carnegie, R.B., and N. Cochennec-Laureau. 2004. Microcell
parasites of oysters: Recent insights and future trends. Aquatic Living
Resources 17: 519-528.
Burreson, E.M., and S.E. Ford. 2004. A review of recent
information on the Haplosporidia, with special reference to Haplosporidium
nelsoni (MSX disease). Aquatic Living Resources 17: 499-517.
Audemard, C., K. S. Reece, E. M. Burreson. 2004. Development
of real-time PCR for the detection and quantification of the protistan
parasite Perkinsus marinus. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 70:
6611-6618.
Audemard, C., M.-C. Sajus, A. Barnaud, B. Sautour, P.-G.
Sauriau, F. J. C. Berthe. 2004. Infection dynamics of Marteilia refringens
in flat oyster Ostrea edulis and copepod Paracartia grani in a
claire pond of Marennes-Oléron Bay. Dis. Aquat. Org. 61: 103-111.
Burreson, E.M., N.A. Stokes, R.B. Carnegie, and M.J. Bishop.
2004. Bonamia sp. (Haplosporidia) found in non-native oysters, Crassostrea
ariakensis, in Bogue Sound, North Carolina. Journal of Aquatic Animal
Health 16 (1): 1-9.
Bower, S.M., R.B. Carnegie, B. Goh, S.R.M. Jones, G.J. Lowe,
and M.W.S. Mak. 2004. Preferential PCR amplification of parasitic protistan
SSU rDNA from metazoan tissues. J. Eukaryotic Microbiology 51 (3): 325-332.
Litaker, R.W., M.W. Vandersea, S.R. Kibler, K.S. Reece, N.A.
Stokes, K.A. Steidinger, D.F. Millie, B.J. Bendis, R.J. Pigg, and P.A. Tester.
2003. Identification of Pfiesteria piscicida (Dinophyceae) and Pfiesteria-like
organisms using internal transcribed spacer-specific PCR assays. Journal of
Phycology 39: 754-761.
Carnegie, R.B., G.R. Meyer, J. Blackbourn, N.
Cochennec-Laureau, F.C.J. Berthe, and S.M. Bower. 2003. Molecular detection of
the oyster parasite Mikrocytos mackini, and a preliminary phylogenetic
analysis. Diseases of Aquatic Organisms 54(3): 219-227.
Anderson, R.S., B.S. Kraus, S.E. McGladdery, K.S. Reece, and
N.A. Stokes. 2003. A thraustochytrid protist isolated from Mercenaria
mercenaria: molecular characterization and host defense responses. Fish
& Shellfish Immunology 15: 183-194.
Ragone Calvo, L. M., C. F. Dungan, B. S.
Roberson and E. M. Burreson. 2003. A systematic evaluation of factors
controlling Perkinsus marinus transmission dynamics in the lower
Chesapeake Bay. Diseases of Aquatic Organisms 56: 75-86.
Ragone Calvo, L. M., G. W. Calvo, and E. M.
Burreson. 2003. Dual disease resistance in a selectively-bred eastern oyster, Crassostrea
virginica, strain tested in Chesapeake Bay. Aquaculture. 220(1-4):69-87
Stokes, N.A., L.M. Ragone Calvo, K.S. Reece, and E. M.
Burreson. 2002. Molecular diagnostics, field validation, and phylogenetic
analysis of Quahog Parasite Unknown (QPX), a pathogen of the hard clam
Mercenaria mercenaria. Diseases of Aquatic Organisms. 52:233-247.
Burreson, E. M. 2001. Spore ornamentation of Haplosporidium
pickfordi, a parasite of freshwater snails in Michigan. J. Eukaryotic
Microbiol. 48(6): 622-626.
Calvo, G. W., M. W. Luckenbach, S. K. Allen and
E. M. Burreson. 2001.
A comparative field study of Crassostrea
ariakensis (Thundberg 1793) and Crassostrea
virginica (Gmelin 1791) in relation to salinity in Virginia.
J. Shellfish Res. 20: 221-229.
Stokes, N. A. and E. M. Burreson. 2001. Differential
diagnosis of mixed infections of Haplosporidium
nelsoni (MSX) and Haplosporidium
costale (SSO) using DNA probes. J.
Shellfish Res. 20: 207-213.
Ragone Calvo, L. M., R. L. Wetzel and E. M. Burreson.
2001. Development and
verification of a model for the population dynamics of the protistan parasite Perkinsus marinus within its host, the eastern oyster Crassostrea
virginica. J. Shellfish. Res.
20: 231-241.
Burreson, E. M., N. A. Stokes and C. S. Friedman.
2000. Increased virulence
in an introduced pathogen: Haplosporidium
nelsoni in the eastern oyster Crassostrea
virginica. J. Aquatic Animal
Health 12: 1-8. (Invited feature article).
Renault,
T., N. A. Stokes, B. Chollet, N. Cochennec, F. Berthe, A. Gérard, and E. M.
Burreson. 2000.
Haplosporidiosis in the Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas from the French Atlantic coast.
Dis. Aquatic Org. 42: 207-214.
O’Farrell, C. L., K. T. Paynter and E. M. Burreson.
2000. Osmotic tolerance
and volume regulation in in vitro cultures of the oyster pathogen Perkinsus
marinus. J. Shellf. Res.
19(10; 133-138.
Yarnall, H. A., K. S. Reece, N. A. Stokes and E. M. Burreson.
2000. A quantitative
competitive polymerase chain reaction assay for the oyster pathogen Perkinsus marinus. J.
Parasitol. 86(4): 827-837.
Calvo, G. W., M. W. Luckenbach, S. K. Allen and E. M. Burreson. 2000. A
comparative field study of Crassostrea
gigas (Thunberg 1793) and Crassostrea
virginica (Gmelin 1791) in relation to salinity in Virginia. J. Shellfish Res. 18: 465-474.
Berthe, F. C. J., E. M. Burreson and M. Hine.
1999. Use of molecular
tools for mollusc disease diagnosis. Bull.
European Assoc. Fish Pathol. 19: 277-278.
Ragone Calvo, L.M. and J.G. Walker and E.M. Burreson. 1998. Prevalence and
distribution of QPX, Quahog Parasite Unknown, in hard clams, Mercenaria
mercenaria in Virginia. Diseases
of Aquatic Organisms. 33:209-219.
Oliver, L.M., W.S. Fisher, S.E. Ford, L.M. Ragone Calvo, E.M. Burreson,
E.B. Sutton, J. Gandy. 1998. Perkinsus
marinus distribution and seasonal variation in oysters Crassostrea
virginica from Florida, Virginia and New York. Diseases of Aquatic
Organisms. 34:51-61.
Anderson, R.S., L.L. Brubacher, L.M. Ragone Calvo, E.M. Burreson and M.A.
Unger. 1998. Effect of in vitro exposure to tributyltin and hypoxia on the
progression of Perkinsus marinus infections and host defense mechanism in
oysters, Crassostrea virginica (Gmelin). Journal of Fish Diseases 21:371-380.
Ford, S.E., R. Smolowitz, L.M. Ragone Calvo, R.D. Barber, and J.N.
Kraeuter. 1997. Evidence that QPX (Quahog Parasite Unknown) is not present in
hatchery-produced hard clam seed. Journal
of Shellfish Research. 16(2):519-521.
Anderson, R.S., L.L. Brubacher, L.M. Ragone Calvo, E.M. Burreson and M.A.
Unger. 1997. Effect of in vitro exposure to tributyltin on gene ration of
oxygen metabolites by oyster hemocytes. Environmental Research. 74:84-90.
Burreson, E.M. and L. Ragone Calvo. 1996. Epizootiology of Perkinsus
marinus disease of oysters in
Chesapeake Bay, with emphasis on data since 1985. Journal of Shellfish
Research Special Publication. Journal of Shellfish Research. 15(1):17-34.
Technical and Advisory Reports
Ragone Calvo, L.M., N.A. Stokes, and E.M. Burreson. 2001. Molecular methods
for the detection of Quahog Parasite Unknown (QPX). Marine Resource Report No.
2001-10, Virginia Institute of Marine Science, Gloucester Point, Virginia.
Ragone Calvo, L.M. and E.M. Burreson. 2002. QPX susceptibility in hard
clams varies with geographic origin of brood stock. Virginia Sea Grant Marine
Resource advisory No. 74 VSG-02-18, Virginia Institute of Marine Science,
Gloucester Point, Virginia.
Personnel
Contact
Us
Eugene M. Burreson
Professor of Marine Science
804-684-7015 FAX: 804-684-7796
gene@vims.edu
Ryan B. Carnegie
Assistant Research Scientist
804-684-7713 FAX: 804-684-7796
carnegie@vims.edu
Nancy Stokes
Marine Scientist Senior
804-684-7410 FAX: 804-684-7796
stokes@vims.edu
Rita Crockett
Marine Scientist Senior
804-684-7451 FAX: 804-684-7796
rita@vims.edu
Department of Environmental and Aquatic Animal Health
Virginia Institute of Marine Science
P.O. Box 1346 (for mail)
Route 1208 Greate Road (for FedEx, UPS)
Gloucester Point, VA 23062 USA
Questions/comments regarding the design of
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(This page was last updated 03/16/2007
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