Greenwood, Spencer J., et al. “Static Tank Depuration and Chronic Short-Term Experimental Contamination of Eastern Oysters (Crassostrea Virginica) With Giardia Duodenalis Cysts”. International Journal of Food Microbiology, vol. 192, 2015, pp. 13-19, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2014.08.027.

Genre

  • Journal Article
Contributors
Author: Greenwood, Spencer J.
Author: McClure, J.T.
Author: Spears, Jonathan
Author: McClure, Carol
Author: Willis, Jessica E.
Author: Davidson, Jeff
Date Issued
2015
Date Published Online
2014-08-28
Abstract

Cysts of the protozoan parasite Giardia have been detected in many bivalve shellfish species worldwide. The detection of zoonotic Giardia duodenalis assemblages A and B is of public health concern, yet there is limited data available demonstrating the bioaccumulation and elimination of Giardia cysts in bivalve shellfish.. This study quantified G. duodenalis cysts that were filtered and retained by oysters (Crassostrea virginica) over a one week chronic exposure period, or 24 hour exposure followed by a 6 day depuration period, using static tank systems containing 10 L of 29 ppt water inoculated with 1,000 or 10,000 cysts. Under chronic exposure, each oyster retained a mean of 13.4 and 87.4 cysts during the first 24 hours of exposure at low and high doses, respectively, and cysts bioaccumulated at a rate of 1.2 and 6.8 cysts/oyster/day, respectively, for the remaining duration of the trials. In acute exposure trials, oysters retained 13.8 cysts or 78.9 cysts at low and high dose, respectively, during the initial 24 hour exposure and naturally depurated cysts at a rate of –0.92 cysts/oyster/day and -2.2 cysts/oyster/day, respectively, after transfer. Although most G. duodenalis cysts were eliminated within the first 24 hours via pseudofeces and feces, detection of some cysts in the fecal material on day 7 of acute exposure trials was indicative of cysts which passed through the digestive tract and released in feces. Only 48-53 % of the initial tank inocula was recovered and may indicate that some cysts were selectively filtered by oysters but degraded through digestion.

Language

  • English
Page range
13-19
Host Title
International Journal of Food Microbiology
Volume
192
ISSN
01681605
PMID Identifier
25305439