OK...I'm going to have to say this is the first time I've ever seen this - since Nikon tele and ultra-tele lenses don't have this problem...
.....I can only conclude that it's a Canon problem...sorry guys...
Do you mean the fringing or the striped bokeh?
Bob
Striped Blokey...
But looking hard at the images, I would say the fringing may also be associated with that as well...
It also may be a rogue-filter - obviously the OP didn't buy two so there's no way of knowing without trying one in a shop...
Neither should appear in a lens of this quality...
The striped "blokey" is neither a lens nor filter problem per se, it's a mis-match between the two. Although you state "since Nikon tele and ultra-tele lenses
don't have this problem", it most certainly does occur with Nikon tele's and tele-zooms...search Google for "bokeh", "lines" and stripes" and you'll find similar reports....more often with the 70-300VR but likely due to it being a popular lens (not my sphere)
Lens designers add coatings to the surface of the glass to combat reflections. The coating is generally Magnesium Flouride and the thickness of the coating will determine the wavelength of light that is affected most. Visible light tends to be in the range 475-650nm and a single coating is usually pitched to deal with 550nm and effeciency deteriorates either side of this. Having multiple elements (and two surfaces/element) allows the designers to put coatings of different thickness on differnet elements and get a better spread of the visible light spectrum covered. The coatings will reflect a portion of the light at 1/4 of the wavelength and use this to cancel the reflections....the chance to have 6 surfaces coated would likely lead to coatings aimed at 475, 500, 525, 550, 575 and 600nm (too simplisitic, but you get the drift).
Everything should be nicely balanced and hunky dorey. Then someone sticks a multi-coated filter on the front that's nicking some of the light at a certain frequency and using it for its own purposes. Now we're buggered....the light at frequency X is missing and the deisgners best efforts have gone up effluent creek sans paddle.
The circumstances leading to the lines/stripes are very specific....a combination of light temperature, the colour of the background blurr and the level of blurr (cirlce of confusion and Airy disk...don't get me started on that please). Longer focal lengths and wider apertures will increase the chance of it appearing but, in theory, it also occurs at shorter lengths to a lesser degree if the same relationships exist.
All this based on my understanding of the physics which may well be flawed.
Okay folks....rip your filters off now
Bob