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Babesiidae

Jan Votýpka
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taxon links [up-->]Babesia [up-->]Entopolypoides [up-->]Echinozoon [down<--]Piroplasmorida Interpreting the tree
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Containing group: Piroplasmorida

Introduction

Family Babesiidae Poche, 1913

Relatively large, piriform, round or oval parasites with the apical complex reduced to a polar ring, rhoptries and subpellicular microtubules. Conoid is present only in some species. At least some stages are found in erythrocytes. Trophozoites dividing by binary fission usually produce two (rarely four) daughter merozoites, which enter new red blood cells. Other stages are in lymphocytes, histiocytes, erythroblasts and other blood cells. Vertebrate hosts are mammals and birds, vectors are ticks where binary fission and schizogony occur, but there is probably no sexual reproduction.

Characteristics

Development in mammalian erythrocytes is relatively well documented. However, the development within the invertebrate host is quite complicated and known only for a few species. After ingestion by a tick, the parasites leave the blood cell to develop into a spiked gamete (ray bodies), which fuse into a motile zygote and form a primary kinete. Due to the penetration of the elongated kinetes (vermicules) into numerous internal organs of the tick, including the ovaries, the infection can be passed through transovarial transmission into the next generation, with the ticks remaining infectious for several generations. Further development occurs in the hemocoel and various organs, where Babesia produces new secondary kinetes, some of which migrate into the salivary glands. During blood feeding that takes several hours or days, piroplasms rapidly multiply and eventually transform into sporonts and infectious sporozoites. Finally, sporozoites from the tick saliva are injected into the vertebrate host, where they directly infect red blood cells and develop into the well-known stages.

The first piroplasmid was described from the blood of cattle during the 1880s epidemic of Texas cattle fever in the United States. Similar blood stages, later included in the genus Babesia, were described in 1888 by Victor Babeş. Only a few years later, Theobald Smith and Frank Kilbourne successfully transmitted a related organism to non-infected cattle via a tick, and showed for the first time that invertebrates can serve as vectors of a parasitic disease.

Title Illustrations
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Scientific Name Babesia rodhaini
Location Parasites in blood of mice
Image Use creative commons This media file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License - Version 3.0.
Copyright © 2008 Jan Votępka
Scientific Name Babesia divergens
Location Parasites in blood of cattle
Image Use creative commons This media file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License - Version 3.0.
Copyright © 2008 Jan Votępka
About This Page

This page is being developed as part of the Tree of Life Web Project Protist Diversity Workshop, co-sponsored by the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR) program in Integrated Microbial Biodiversity and the Tula Foundation.

Jan Votýpka
Department of Parasitology, Charles University

Correspondence regarding this page should be directed to Jan Votępka at

Page: Tree of Life Babesiidae. Authored by Jan Votępka. The TEXT of this page is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License - Version 3.0. Note that images and other media featured on this page are each governed by their own license, and they may or may not be available for reuse. Click on an image or a media link to access the media data window, which provides the relevant licensing information. For the general terms and conditions of ToL material reuse and redistribution, please see the Tree of Life Copyright Policies.

Citing this page:

Votýpka, Jan. 2011. Babesiidae. Version 18 May 2011 (under construction). http://tolweb.org/Babesiidae/68076/2011.05.18 in The Tree of Life Web Project, http://tolweb.org/

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