Abstract
The Asian freshwater clam, Corbicula fluminea, inhabits environments recognized to be contaminated with waterborne Giardia cysts. Sixty-four tissue samples of Giardia-free clams were spiked with various numbers of Giardia duodenalis cysts within the range of 50–700 cysts. Regression analysis showed that paired numbers of spiked (x) versus recovered (y) cysts regressed significantly (P < 0.01) according to the equation y= 42.57 + 1.81x (±64.3). The cyst detection threshold was 43 cysts/clam, the coefficient of determination was 77%, and the overall sensitivity of cyst detection was 42.9%. All 20 values of cyst numbers in clam tissue samples that were processed blind were located within the 95% prediction limits of the linear regression equation. The cyst retention rate of 160 clams kept in an aquarium with 38 l of water spiked with 1.00 × 105 G. duodenalis cysts was approximately 1.3 × 103 cysts/clam. No waterborne cysts were detected by the membrane filtration method 90 min after spiking the aquarium water. G. duodenalis cysts were detected in clam tissue up to 3 weeks post-exposure. Filtration of water by clams substantially depleted the aquarium water of its particulate matter. The sampling program demonstrated that the population of 160 clams examined during the study could be accurately assessed for exposure to waterborne Giardia cysts by random sampling of 86 (54%) clams. The results indicate that C. fluminea clams can be used␣for biological monitoring of contamination with Giardia.
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Received: 27 May 1998 / Accepted: 7 July 1998
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Graczyk, T., Fayer, R., Conn, D. et al. Evaluation of the recovery of waterborne Giardia cysts by freshwater clams and cyst detection in clam tissue. Parasitol Res 85, 30–34 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1007/s004360050503
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s004360050503