“…The production of radicals with microbicidal activity, such as reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS), is induced after phagocytosis and it may be used to evaluate the immunocompetence in different haemocyte subsets (156). Oxidative activity through ROS production is generally higher in granulocytes than in hyalinocytes, which was observed in oysters C. ariakensis (151), C. gigas (154,156,250,251), C. hongkongensis (157), C. nippona (160), C. virginica (167,252), O. chilensis (169), Hyotissa hyotis, Ostrea circumpicta, S. kegaki (148), and S. glomerata (173); in clams R. decussatus (73) and R. philippinarum (75); in the geoduck clam P. globosa (45); in ark clams A. broughtonii, A. kagoshimensis and T. granosa (82); in marine mussels M. galloprovincialis (114), M. unguiculatus (117), P. canaliculus (119), P. viridis (122), and X. securis (124); and in freshwater mussels L. marginalis (140). In L. marginalis, granulocytes were identified as the principal phagocytes with prominent activity of superoxide anion (a ROS) and nitric oxide (NO, a RNS) (140).…”