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Calcinosis
In Long Island Sound Lobsters During The Summer Of 2002Alistair D.M.
Dove1, Carl P. LoBue2 and Paul R. Bowser3 1Department of Microbiology and Imunology, Cornell College of
Veterinary Medicine. Marine Disease Pathology and Research Consortium. Marine Sciences Research Center, Stony Brook
University, Stony Brook NY 11794; 2New York Department of Environmental Conservation,
205 Belle Meade Rd, East Setauket NY 11733; 3Department of
Microbiology and Immunology. Cornell
College of Veterinary Medicine. Ithaca,
Y 14853. A new disease of lobsters that caused mortalities in the wild is
described as a form of calcinosis. A
significant number of moribund and dead lobsters were reported to state
authorities by lobster fishermen in Long Island Sound, New York, during the
summer of 2002. An orange discoloration
of the abdomen, lethargy, an excess of epibionts and poor post-capture survival
characterized morbid lobsters. On
necropsy, severe extensive multifocal or diffuse mineralized granulomatous
inflammation of the gills and antennal glands was the most striking
pathology. In the gills, granulomas
were frequently lodged in filaments, resulting in congestion, ischemia and
coagulative necrosis of gill tissues.
In the antennal glands, granulomas were concentrated along the border
between the filtration and resorption zones of the organ. Affected lobsters lacked observable reserve
inclusion cells (energy storage cells) and thus appeared to be either malnourished
or metabolically exhausted. No
significant pathogens were recovered from diseased individuals, suggesting that
the disease was of a metabolic origin.
In lobsters with early stage disease, granulomas were focused around
calcium carbonate (aragonite) crystals.
Aragonite crystals were identified by their spheroid shape, radial
striations, clear to golden brown coloration and strong birefringence. In early stage individuals, naked aragonite
crystals were observed, whereas in later stage individuals, aragonite crystals
were observed to be at the center of granulomas. In most cases, the granulomas had continued to mineralize in an
amorphous fashion. It is not yet clear
why this disease occurred, but it may be related to anomalously high sea bottom
temperatures in Long Island Sound (~23ēC) during the summer of 2002 and
associated disruptions of the calcium and respiratory chemistry of lobsters in
favor of deposition of calcium minerals in soft tissues.
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