Review of haploporid (Trematoda) genera with ornate muscularisation in the region of the oral sucker, including four new species and a new genus
Species of the Haploporidae Nicoll, 1914 with elaborate muscularisation of the oral sucker belong in three trematode genera, including three new species and a new genus from the intestine of fishes in Australian waters. Spiritestis Nagaty, 1948 is resurrected and S. herveyensis n. sp. is described f...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Systematic parasitology 2013-02, Vol.84 (2), p.167-191 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Species of the Haploporidae Nicoll, 1914 with elaborate muscularisation of the oral sucker belong in three trematode genera, including three new species and a new genus from the intestine of fishes in Australian waters.
Spiritestis
Nagaty, 1948 is resurrected and
S. herveyensis
n. sp. is described from the mullet
Moolgarda seheli
(Forsskål) collected in Hervey Bay, Queensland, Australia; the latter differs from
S. arabii
Nagaty, 1948 in that the position of the genital pore is pharyngeal rather than post-pharyngeal and the geographical range is off Australia rather than the Red Sea. A new genus is proposed for two new species, with a uniquely ornamented oral sucker, which infect Australian scatophagids. Members of
Capitimitta
n. g. are distinguished from
Waretrema
Srivastava, 1937, species of which have a simple oral sucker with six radially arranged anterior muscular lobes, in that their oral sucker is V-shaped with six embedded muscular finger-like structures in the anteroventral portion. The relatively small
C. darwinensis
n. sp., collected from
Selenotoca multifasciata
(Richardson) at Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia, is distinguished from
C. costata
n. sp., collected from
Scatophagus argus
(Linnaeus) in the same locality and
S
.
multifasciata
off Brisbane, Australia, and by having smaller eggs, a vitellarium commencing at a level close to the ventral sucker rather than at greater than one ovarian length posterior to the ventral sucker, and shorter tegumental body spines. Sequence data of a
c
.2,500 bp region of the 3′ end of 18S, the entire ITS region and the 5′ end of the 28S revealed that
Spiritestis
and
Capitimitta
are not as closely related as some morphological features would suggest and are probably not the closest relative of each other. What has been reported as
Waretrema piscicolum
Srivastava, 1937 probably consists of several species, some in different genera, and one, based on material collected by Dr Masaaki Machida, is proposed as
Spiritestis machidai
n. sp. from
Crenimugil crenilabis
(Forsskål) off Japan. Phylogenetic hypotheses, based on analysis of an alignment of partial 28S sequences with other haploporids, provide a framework for the evaluation of interrelationships within the Haploporidae. These analyses show that: (1)
Spiritestis
and
Capitimitta
are supported within the Haploporidae; (2) branches to
Forticulcita
Overstreet, 1982,
Saccocoelioides
Szidat, 1954,
Spiritestis
and
Capitimitta
create a clade that is sister to haplop |
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ISSN: | 0165-5752 1573-5192 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11230-012-9401-8 |