Plasmodium minasense
Plasmodium minasense is a parasite of the genus Plasmodium subgenus Carinamoeba.
Like all Plasmodium species P. minasense has both vertebrate and insect hosts. The vertebrate hosts for this parasite are lizards.
Taxonomy
The original description of this species was by Carini and Rudolphi in 1912 in a lizard Mabuia agilis. Since then a number of subspecies of P. minasense have been described.The diagnostic features of P. minasense are:
- The schizonts are smaller than normal erythrocyte nuclei.
- Schzonts produce 4-8 merozoites
- The gametocytes are equal to or smaller than erythrocyte nuclei in size and round in shape
- They infect hosts of the lizard families Scincidae, Iguanidae and Teiidae in the Neotropics
Subspecies
Subspecies are currently named on the basis of the hosts infected. This criterion may be subject to revision when DNA based taxonomy is applied to this species complex. The subspecies currently recognised include:P. minasense anolisi
P. minasense calcaratae
P. minasense capitoi
P. minasense carinii
P. minasense diminutivum
P. minasense minasense
P. minasense plicae
''P. minasense tegui''
P. minasense anolisi
Described by Telford in 1979Distribution
Found in Panama, Central America and the Caribbean.Hosts
Known hosts include the lizards Anolis cybotes, Anolis distichus, Anolis frenatus and ''Anolis limifrons''P. minasense calcaratae
This subspecies was described by Telford and Telford in 2003.It is characterized by very small, usually fan-shaped, schizonts that average 3.4 × 2.6 micrometres. The schizonts produce 3.9 merozoites.
The gametocytes are spherical or ovoid averaging 6.7 × 5.0 micrometres in size with a length-width product of 33.7 and a length/width ratio of 1.4. By dimension they are not sexual dimorphic.