Myxosporea is a class of microscopic animals, all of whom are . They belong to the Myxozoa clade within Cnidaria. They have a complex life cycle that comprises vegetative forms in two hosts—one an aquatic invertebrate (generally an annelid but sometimes a ) and the other an vertebrate, usually a fish. Each parasitized host releases a different type of spore. The two forms of spore are so different in appearance that until relatively recently they were treated as belonging to different classes within the Myxozoa.
It has been hypothesized that myxosporeans might have evolved from a transmissible tumor of Polypodium. This hypothesis is called the "SCANDAL hypothesis", an acronym for speciation by cancer development animals, referencing its radical nature.
Such a life cycle—with two different sexual stages, each resulting in two kinds of resistant spores—is unique amongst parasitic organisms, let alone those in the Animal. This mode of life has been confirmed in several other Myxobolus species. This Disease vector has also been proved in other families. Ceratonova shasta, an economically important parasite of salmonids, has been shown to use a polychaete worm as an alternate host.
Direct transmission between fish has also been demonstrated, so far in three species of Enteromyxum.
Examples of Myxosporean genus are Kudoa, which attacks fish muscle, and Myxobolus, which attacks the of freshwater fish.
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