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1 October 2001 PHYLOGENETIC POSITION OF EIMERIA ANTROZOI, A BAT COCCIDIUM (APICOMPLEXA: EIMERIIDAE) AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO MORPHOLOGICALLY SIMILAR EIMERIA SPP. FROM BATS AND RODENTS BASED ON NUCLEAR 18S AND PLASTID 23S rDNA SEQUENCES
Xiaomin Zhao, Donald W. Duszynski, Eric S. Loker
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Abstract

Partial plastid 23S and nuclear 18S rDNA genes were amplified and sequenced from 2 morphologically similar Eimeria species, E. antrozoi from a bat (Antrozous pallidus) and E. arizonensis from deer mice (Peromyscus spp.), as well as some other Eimeria species from bats and rodents. The phylogenetic trees clearly separated E. antrozoi from E. arizonensis. The phylogenies based on plastid 23S rDNA data and combined data of both plastid and nuclear genes grouped 2 bat Eimeria and 3 morphologically similar Eimeria species from rodents into 2 separate clades with high bootstrap support (100%, 3 rodent Eimeria species; 72–97%, 2 bat Eimeria species), which supports E. antrozoi as a valid species. The rodent Eimeria species did not form a monophyletic group. The 2 bat Eimeria species formed a clade with the 3 morphologically similar rodent Eimeria species (E. arizonensis, E. albigulae, E. onychomysis, all from cricetid rodents) with 100% bootstrap support, whereas 2 other rodent Eimeria species (E. nieschulzi, E. falciformis, from murid rodents) formed a separate clade with 100% bootstrap support. This suggests that the 2 Eimeria species from bats might be derived from rodent Eimeria species and may have arisen as a result of lateral host transfer between rodent and bat hosts.

Xiaomin Zhao, Donald W. Duszynski, and Eric S. Loker "PHYLOGENETIC POSITION OF EIMERIA ANTROZOI, A BAT COCCIDIUM (APICOMPLEXA: EIMERIIDAE) AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO MORPHOLOGICALLY SIMILAR EIMERIA SPP. FROM BATS AND RODENTS BASED ON NUCLEAR 18S AND PLASTID 23S rDNA SEQUENCES," Journal of Parasitology 87(5), 1120-1123, (1 October 2001). https://doi.org/10.1645/0022-3395(2001)087[1120:PPOEAA]2.0.CO;2
Received: 6 November 2000; Accepted: 1 February 2001; Published: 1 October 2001
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