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Dive into the research topics where Michael D. B. Burt is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael D. B. Burt.


Hydrobiologia | 1981

On some commensal Turbellaria of the Canadian East Coast

Lesly C. Fleming; Michael D. B. Burt; G. B. Bacon

The brachyurans Chionoecetes opilio and Hyas araneus collected from the east coast of Canada harbour two species of commensal turbellarians. Ectocotyla hirudo (Levinsen) and E. multitesticulata Fleming & Burt are found on the gills and branchial chambers of male and female crabs. The molluscs Crassostrea virginica and Mytilus edulis collected from several locations where they are cultured along the Northumberland strait carry two commensal eulecithophoran turbellarians, both on the gills, viz., Urastoma cyprinae (Graff) and Paravortex gemellipara (Linton), the latter being a new host record. Aspects of the biology and life-history of these turbellarians are discussed, especially in relationship to the biology of their hosts.


Hydrobiologia | 1993

Effect of acute pH depression on the survival of the freshwater amphipod Hyalella azteca at variable temperatures : field and laboratory studies

Wilfred Pilgrim; Michael D. B. Burt

Field observations on temperature and pH of a small pond showed that a amphipod population of Hyalella azteca was exposed to variable seasonal pH between 5.10–5.85, and water temperatures between 2–21 °C. Laboratory experiments were designed to simulate seasonal temperatures and field pHs of a small pond habitat. Laboratory bioassay experiments were conducted to determine the survival of Hyalella azteca at pHs 4, 5, 6 and 7, and varying temperatures of 5°, 10°, 15°, 20° and 25 °C.The LT100 at pH 4 and 25 °C was 5.7 ± 0.47 days, compared to 47.3 ± 2.49 days at 5 °C. An Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) showed temperature was a significant (p > 0.0001) source of variation in the acute lethality of pH to H. azteca. A Duncans Multiple Range Test (DMRT) further showed that in laboratory experiments at pH 4, there was a significant difference (α = 0.01) between the LT100s at 5°, 10°, 15° and 20 °C, but not between temperatures 20° and 25 °C.


Hydrobiologia | 1981

Ultrastructure of the epidermis of adult and embryonic Paravortex species (Turbellaria, Eulecithophora)

Barbara M. MacKinnon; Michael D. B. Burt; A. W. Pike

The epidermis and associated structures of adult and embryonic Paravortex cardii and Paravortex karlingi, internal parasites of Cerastoderma edule, have been examined using scanning and transmission electron microscopy. The cellular epidermis of adult Paravortex bears cilia and microvilli which differ in number and distribution between P. karlingi and P. cardii. Cellular organelles include mitochondria, lipid bodies, Golgi bodies, and ultrarhabdites. Epidermal nuclei are located in the proximal portion of the cells. The development of the tegument of embryo Paravortex has been described and a possible origin for the embryo capsule is suggested. These findings are discussed in relation to the phylogenetic status of the Turbellaria in relation to other Platyhelminthes and in the functional adaptation of the epidermis for a parasitic mode of life.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2002

An Aspartyl Protease Inhibitor Orthologue Expressed by Parelaphostrongylus tenuis Is Immunogenic in an Atypical Host

Michael S. Duffy; Nancy MacAfee; Michael D. B. Burt; Judith A. Appleton

ABSTRACT Parelaphostrongylus tenuis is a neurotropic nematode common in white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) of eastern North America. This parasite is the causative agent of a debilitating neurologic disease in atypical hosts, including domestic livestock. In order to identify proteins of potential significance in the host-parasite relationship, a cDNA library was produced from adult P. tenuis mRNA. Screening the library with antisera from infected red deer (Cervus elaphus elaphus) and immunized AO strain rats, we identified clones with sequence similarities to aspartyl protease inhibitors from several parasitic nematodes. Antibody that was generated against this recombinant protein of P. tenuis (Pt-API-1) detected the native protein in E/S products, in muscle and gonad, and on the surface of the cuticle of adult male and female P. tenuis. The native protein was detected in internal structures of first-stage (L1) and third-stage (L3) larvae. Reverse transcription-PCR confirmed expression of Pt-api-1 in L1, L3, and adult male and female worms. Expression of Pt-API-1 throughout the life cycle of P. tenuis suggests an essential function. Antibodies specific for recombinant Pt-API-1 were detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in sera from 12 red deer experimentally infected with P. tenuis. Antibodies were detected within 28 to 56 days postinfection. Responses were sustained or biphasic in animals with patent infections, consistent with expression of Pt-API-1 by L1. Our results are compatible with findings in other parasitic nematodes showing that aspartyl protease inhibitors are highly immunogenic.


Journal of Parasitology | 1994

Helminths of the black bear, Ursus americanus, in New Brunswick

Michael S. Duffy; Trent A. Greaves; Michael D. B. Burt

Between May 1989 and October 1991, 544 black bears Ursus americanus were collected in New Brunswick and examined for Trichinella spiralis larvae. In addition, 110 of these bears were examined for filarial nematodes, and the entire intestinal tracts of 12 bears were examined for intestinal helminths. Four species of helminths were identified from these bears, including Trichinella spiralis, Dirofilaria ursi, Baylisascaris transfuga, and Taenia krabbei. This represents the first documentation of T. spiralis in Maritime Canada and extends eastward the range of T. krabbei.


Hydrobiologia | 1981

Ultrastructure of the eye of Urastoma cyprinae (Turbellaria, Alloeocoela)

Michael D. B. Burt; G. N. Bance

Urastoma cyprinae (Graff) is a microturbellarian which has been recorded both as a free-living organism by Westblad (1955) and Marcus (1951) and as a commensal in various lamellibranch molluscs (see Burt & Drinnan 1968). The material used in this study came from oysters, Crassostroea virginica, collected off the coast of Prince Edward Island, in which hosts it occurs in large numbers especially during the summer months when the oysters are spawning (Fleming et al. 1981). When U. cyprinae is exposed to light as happens, for example, when an oyster is opened, it shows a marked negative phototactic response.


Systematic Parasitology | 2008

Redescription of Pseudanthobothrium hanseni Baer, 1956 and description of P. purtoni n. sp. (Cestoda: Tetraphyllidea) from different pairs of rajid skate hosts, with comments on the host-specificity of the genus in the northwest Atlantic

H. S. Randhawa; G. W. Saunders; Marilyn E. Scott; Michael D. B. Burt

During a parasitological survey of Leucoraja erinacea, L. ocellata, Malacoraja senta and Amblyraja radiata from Passamaquoddy Bay and waters surrounding the West Isles of the Bay of Fundy, NB, Canada, seven species of cestodes were recovered. Examination of these skates revealed the presence of two distinct species of Pseudanthobothrium Baer, 1956: one was retrieved from M. senta and A. radiata, identified as P. hanseni Baer, 1956 and redescribed herein; the other was retrieved from L. erinacea and L. ocellata and differs from previously described species. The new species is described herein as P. purtoni n. sp. on the basis of the degree of apolysis, the maximum width of the strobila, the length of the cirrus-sac and the number of testes. Additionally, the distinctiveness of both species of Pseudanthobothrium is supported by the characterisation of a 643 base-pair nuclear marker, which includes most of the D2 variable region of the large subunit ribosomal DNA (LSU). The recovery of two different tetraphyllidean species, each from two different host species, challenges the oioxeny (strict host-specificity) of echeneibothriine cestodes and can be explained, at least in part, by the similarities in diet and substrate preference within each host pair.


Journal of Parasitology | 2010

A New Genus and Species of Gyrodactylid (Monogenea) From Silver Hake, Merluccius Bilinearis, in the Bay of Fundy, New Brunswick, Canada

David K. Cone; Cathryn L. Abbott; Scott R. Gilmore; Michael D. B. Burt

Abstract Gyrocerviceanseris passamaquoddyensis n. gen., n. sp. is described from the gills of silver hake, Merluccius bilinearis, in Passamaquoddy Bay, southwestern New Brunswick, Canada. Diagnostic features include an oval haptor with asymmetrically distributed marginal hooks (3 pairs anterior, 5 pairs posterior) and a prominent muscular flange on the lateral margins, between the anterior and posterior groups of hooks. The hamuli are well developed, with a straight point, a short shaft, and an elongate, blade-like ventral root having a ventrally directed, gooseneck-shaped tip. The ventral bar is rectangular, with a small, hourglass-shaped posterior membrane. There is no dorsal bar. The marginal hook sickle is sharply curved, with a long fine point, an upturned toe, a small heel, and a straight handle. A partial DNA sequence from 18S rDNA was generated and found to be over 11% divergent from its closest matches in GenBank. However, it was less divergent (7.8%) from a previously unpublished sequence of Gyrodactylus emembranatus Malmberg, 1970, suggesting this species is its closest known relative. Interestingly, both species have almost identical marginal hook sickles and a male copulatory organ (MCO) with small spines in multiple arched rows. Gyrocerviceanseris n. gen. is the sixth genus of viviparous monogeneans to be described from marine and estuarine fishes of the northwestern Atlantic Ocean.


Parasitology | 1984

The development of the tegument and cercomer of the polycephalic larvae (cercoscolices) of Paricterotaenia paradoxa (Rudolphi, 1802) (Cestoda: Dilepididae) at the ultrastructural level

Barbara M. MacKinnon; Michael D. B. Burt

The development of the tegument and cercomer of Paricterotaenia paradoxa polycephalic larvae was examined using electron microscopy. Larvae are formed by budding from the inner surface of the tegument of the degenerating hexacanth embryo. A new secondary tegument formed around the larvae is probably produced from the original hexacanth sub-tegumental cells. Microvilli covering the surface of young larvae are converted directly into microtriches, as the larvae develop, by addition of electron-dense material to the proximal part of the microvillus. Remnants of the original microvillus are visible at the distal surface of each new microthrix, but they eventually degenerate. The cercomer homologue is represented by scattered follicular cells, bearing microvilli, lying just within the containing cyst wall. The continuity of tegumentary tissue from one developmental stage to the next is discussed.


Hydrobiologia | 1981

Paravortex karlingi sp. nov. from Cerastoderma edule L., in Britain

A. W. Pike; Michael D. B. Burt

Paravortex karlingi sp. nov. collected from the intestine of the bivalve mollusc Cerastorderma edule from the Ythan Estuary, N. E. Scotland, and elsewhere, is distinguished from a closely related species, P. cardii, also occurring in this host, on the basis of differences in habitat occupied by the two species as well as behavioural and morphological differences. P. karlingi is smaller, has fewer embryos in the gravid adult and shows a different behaviour pattern when released from the host intestine. It is also negatively phototactic whereas P. cardii is initially positively phototactic, only later becoming negatively phototactic. The occurrence of both species in Britain is briefly described.

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Duane E. Barker

Memorial University of Newfoundland

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Lesley C. Fleming

University of New Brunswick

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Rachael J. Ritchie

University of New Brunswick

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Steve Griffiths

University of New Brunswick

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