A new nematode Pharyngodon morgani sp.nov., intestinal parasite of a lizard, Mabuya striata, in Nyasaland

Parasitology ◽  
1961 ◽  
Vol 51 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 395-399 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. M. Fitzsimmons

Definition. Oxyurinae—mouth with three small lips; cuticle with or without lateral flanges; vestibule absent; oesophagus with a posterior globular bulb containing a valvular apparatus and separated from the rest of the oesophagus by a slight constriction; excretory pore behind the oesophageal bulb; posterior extremity of the body in both sexes obliquely truncate ventrally at the level of the anus, rounded and prolonged as a long subulate tail which is provided with spines or smooth.

1988 ◽  
Vol 66 (7) ◽  
pp. 1502-1505 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jane P. M. Richardson ◽  
Martin L. Adamson

A new species of kathlaniid nematode, Megalobatrachonema waldeni, from the intestine of the northwestern salamander, Ambystoma gracile, in British Columbia is described. The new species is placed in the subgenus Megalobatrachonema (Chabaudgolvania) as it lacks valves in the oesophageal bulb. Megalobatrachonema waldeni differs from the two other members of this subgenus, M. elongatum (Baird, 1958) and M. terdentatum (Linstow, 1890), in having large cervical alae and distinctly separate lips, and in lacking hypodermal lip peduncles and a pseudosucker. Megalobatrachonema waldeni has simpler onchia, smaller spicules, and a more prominent swelling at the base of the oesophageal corpus than M. elongatum, and differs from M. terdentatum by its distinct corpus swelling, more anterior excretory pore, fewer caudal papillae, and longer tail.


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4845 (2) ◽  
pp. 239-252
Author(s):  
JULIA K. ZOGRAF ◽  
OLGA N. PAVLYUK ◽  
YULIA A. TREBUKHOVA ◽  
LI BAOQUAN

The family Enchelidiidae is recovered as monophyletic and appears to be a more recently derived taxon within the superfamily Oncholaimoidea. It combines nematodes with buccal cavity with three unequal teeth, crenate pharynx, and absence of demanian system. Genus Thoonchus was erected for nematodes characterized by the large buccal cavity with heavily cuticularized walls and several rows of denticles, short and arcuate spicules and gubernaculums with expanded corpus. One new species is described here from the Sishili Bay, located in the northern Yellow Sea. Thoonchus covidus sp. nov. is characterized by the body length 3195‒4339 µm, outer labial and cephalic setae in one circle, pocket shaped amphid above the buccal cavity base, secretory-excretory pore at the base of cephalic setae, arched spicules, gubernaculum with thin proximal extension parallel to spicules, preanal supplement absent, three pairs of preanal papillae. It differs from other congeners by the position of secretory-excretory pore, absence of supplementary organ in males and presence of three pairs of precloacal papillae. Redescription of T. giganticus is also provided. After critical evaluation of the genus we recognize 4 valid species and provide a taxonomic key to species. 


Zootaxa ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 2053 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-58
Author(s):  
NATALIE BARNES ◽  
TIMOTHY JOHN FERRERO

Two new species of Manunema are described from the coast of Kuwait, one from the intertidal in Kuwait Bay and one found at shallow subtidal sites in the Arabian Gulf. Like other species of Manunema, the two species described here are characterised by coarse striation of the cuticle; a tapered, trunk-like cervical region; a large, elongate oesophageal bulb and corresponding swelling of the body; absence of cervical setae; pedunculate somatic setae; paired outstretched ovaries in females, tubular precloacal supplements in males and a pair of simple, curved spicules in males. Manunema kithara sp. nov. differs from other species in the genus by its characteristic, elongate, double oesophageal bulb which resembles a guitar in shape, being broader in the posterior half, and by the shape and form of the two precloacal supplements in the males. Manunema kuwaitiensis sp. nov. is similar to both M. proboscidis and M. annulata in having a weakly double oesophageal bulb, but differs in the morphology and position of the single precloacal supplement in males.


Nematology ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 20 (5) ◽  
pp. 441-447 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ebrahim Shokoohi ◽  
Hadi Panahi ◽  
Hendrika Fourie ◽  
Joaquín Abolafia

Summary A population of Macrolaimus arboreus was collected from the rhizosphere of pine in Iran. This population of M. arboreus is characterised by the body length, 800-1010 μm in females, lip region with six seta-like papillae directed anteriad, stoma nearly as long as wide (9-11 × 7 μm), with cheilostom slightly longer than gymnostom and cheilorhabdia and gymnorhabdia well-developed, pharyngeal corpus 1.8-2.0 times the isthmus length, with slightly swollen metacorpus, excretory pore located at isthmus level, female reproductive system monodelphic-prodelphic reflexed with short post-vulval uterine sac, female tail conical (57-67 μm, c = 13.7-15.0, c′ = 3.5-3.8), ending in an acute tip which is weakly curved dorsad, and phasmids at 54-60% of tail length. Measurements and illustrations, including SEM, are provided.


Zootaxa ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4712 (3) ◽  
pp. 365-376
Author(s):  
JANS MORFFE ◽  
NAYLA GARCÍA ◽  
KOICHI HASEGAWA ◽  
RAMON A. CARRENO

Aoruroides chubudaigaku n. sp. (Nematoda: Oxyuridomorpha: Thelastomatidae) is described from the wood-burrowing cockroach Panesthia angustipennis spadica (Shiraki, 1906) (Blattodea: Blaberidae: Panesthiinae) from Aichi prefecture, Japan. Females of A. chubudaigaku n. sp. are similar to A. costaricensis Carreno & Tuhela, 2011 by the position of the nerve ring at level of the first third of the isthmus, the body length and the comparative measurements of the oesophagus and tail. They differ by the position of the excretory pore and the vulva. The males of A. chubudaigaku n. sp. are characterized by the absence of ornamentations in the cervical cuticle and the nerve ring located at the posterior third of the corpus. In addition, the males of the new species can be differentiated by the length of the body and the comparative lengths of the oesophagus and the tail. The phylogeny of A. chubudaigaku n. sp. is inferred by the D2-D3 domains of the LSU rDNA and the validity of the genus Aoruroides Travassos & Kloss, 1958 is discussed on the basis of both molecular and morphological data. This constitutes the first species of the genus Aoruroides described from the Japanese archipelago. 


1965 ◽  
Vol 43 (5) ◽  
pp. 689-700 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. A. Wright

The histology of the oesophageal region of the plant parasitic nematode Xiphinema index Thorne and Allen, 1950 has been studied in cross sections of KMnO4-fixed nematodes. The stoma consists of cuticle, which is of different types anterior and posterior to the guide ring, and its underlying hypodermis. The latter tissue is connected through the dorsal, ventral, and lateral hypodermal chords to the interchordal hypodermis of the body wall. It is suggested that the dilator buccae muscles may act to close the stoma around the odontostyle. Stylet retractor muscles are identified. Observations on the guide ring complex support the interpretation that the guide sheath is an eversible portion of the posterior stoma cuticle. The odontostyle is embedded within the tip of the extension, which appears to be similar in composition and continuous with the posterior stoma cuticle. Cellular circumoesophageal membranes occur around the oesophagus. Those surrounding the oesophageal bulb are modified as muscle cells.


1988 ◽  
Vol 66 (8) ◽  
pp. 1857-1864 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin L. Adamson ◽  
Doahne Baccam

Two new species of Cosmocercoidea are described from the posterior intestine of Amphisbaena alba from Brazil, namely Maracaya belemensis and Aplectana albae. Maracaya belemensis n.sp. differs from the type species, Maracaya graciai, in that the spicule is more arcuate and the posterior extremity of the gubernaculum tapers more gradually. In addition, a small prevulvar swelling is present in the type species but absent in M. belemensis. Maracaya pusilla (Miranda, 1924) n.comb. differs from the new species in possessing bifid spicules and in having many more eggs in utero. Aplectana albae n.sp. most resembles Aplectana unguiculata (Rudolphi, 1819) by its short, simple spicules. It differs in that the first two pairs of postanal papillae are very close together rather than being well separated as in A. unguiculata. The disposition of caudal papillae in both new species resembles that seen in many other Cosmocercidae and genera classified in the Atractidae. On the basis of this resemblance and similarities in the form of the excretory pore, Maracaya, Shrankiana, Schrankianella, Labeonema, Ibrahimia, and Paradollfusnema are transferred from the Atractidae to the Cosmocercidae.


Parasitology ◽  
1924 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 164-213 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leslie G. Saunders

(1) Forcipomyia is one of the few genera of the Ceratopogoninae (Chironomidae) whose larvae are not aquatic. They retain, however, the apneustic condition typical of the entire family, and are therefore compelled to live in moist places such as beneath the rotting bark of fallen trees, in the hollow tap roots of dead plants, in wounds and rot holes in trees, in drying horse and cow manure, in decaying fungi, and in the nests of ants. The immature forms are strongly gregarious.(2) The larvae pass through four stages, each lasting about a week; the successive changes in chaetotaxy at each moult is recorded in the discussion of F. picea. All known European species of this genus hibernate as third or fourth stage larvae. The duration of the pupal stage is about one week; the length of life of the adult has not been determined. There are usually three generations per annum. The adults are known to suck the blood of other insects.(3) The larvae are eucephalous, more or less cylindrical, 3–6 mm. long, with eleven clearly denned segments (three thoracic and eight abdominal, the eighth divided into two apparent segments). Progression is achieved by means of a retractable, biramous, prothoracic pseudopod, and a ventral hook-studded ridge on the ultimate abdominal segment, with the occasional aid of the mandibles.(4) The head and body bear numerous lanceolate and simple hairs of great specific importance.(5) The mouth-parts consist of a fleshy labrum, a pair of small premandibles, a pair of long, slender mandibles working in the sagittal plane on either side of the labrum, a pair of reduced maxillae of fleshy nature with chitinous internal supports, and a simple untoothed labium. Within the head there is a complicated chitinous structure, the hypopharynx; this is figured and described in full detail and its action in comminuting the food is revealed for the first time.(6) No investigation has hitherto been made of the internal anatomy. The alimentary canal, consisting of buccal cavity, hypopharynx, oesophagus, mid-gut, and hind-gut, is quite simple in structure, without nodules or caecal chambers. It is only slightly longer than the body, a loop occurring in the hind-gut when the larva contracts.(7) The malpighian tubules are either two or three in number, the latter condition being unique among insects. The third is ventral, passing into the posterior part of the body only.(8) The salivary glands are a pair of S-shaped bodies closely adhering to the walls of the anterior portion of the mid-gut; they are chiefly composed of large binucleate cells.(9) The circulatory system consists of a dorsal vessel extending throughout the body and passing between the lobes of the brain above the oesophagus into the head. In the eighth abdominal segment it enlarges slightly to form the heart, with one pair of ostia or valves situated on its posterior extremity.(10) The nephrocytes are arranged segmentally, four to each abdominal segment and a single mass in the thorax, all attached to the dorsal vessel. The excretory function of these cells was demonstrated by injection of ammonia-carmine into the body cavity.(11) The nervous system is only very slightly cephalised, there being seven ganglia for the eight abdominal segments and three in the thorax; the normal bilobed brain is situated in the thorax in all larval stages. The sympathetic system is described, and differs somewhat from that of its close relative, Chironomus.(12) Despite the absence of spiracles there is a well-developed tracheal system in the form of two main trunks with transverse connections, branch tracheae, and subcutaneous plexuses.(13) The muscular system, oenocytes, fat-body, and gonads have also been studied in detail.(14) The larval skin is retained upon the last four or five abdominal segments of the pupa.(15) The characters used for determining the species, in their order of importance, are as follows: Larva: chaetotaxy, prothoracic pseudopod, markings of the head, anal blood-gills. Pupa: cuticular spines, prothoracic horns.(16) The larvae and pupae of nine species of Forcipomyia are described with particular reference to their specific characters. Descriptions of the adults of two new species, F. radidcola and F. pulchrithorax, by Mr F. W. Edwards, are appended.(17) Closely related forms are Euforcipomyia and other exotic subgenera not yet named, and the genus Atrichopogon (now including Kempia). Dasyhelea belongs to this group of hairy-winged flies, but its larvae partly resemble those of the bare-winged Ceratopogonines in that they have lost the pro-thoracic pseudopod and macrochaetae, but retain the anal hooks.


1951 ◽  
Vol 25 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 33-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Basil Goodey

During the detailed study of the finer anatomical structure of the potato tuber nematode, Ditylenchus destructor Thome, 1945, the presence of an apparently hitherto unrecorded structure was revealed. It is situated on the ventral surface of the body just anterior to the excretory pore. It is quite easily seen in living nematodes and has no doubt, in the past, been confused with the excretory pore. It appears as a bright lens-like structure, more highly refractive than the neighbouring parts, especially when specimens are viewed in an approximately lateral position. The structure is really band-like, usually more or less biconvex in section, situated between the cuticle and hypodermal layer.


2019 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 22-29
Author(s):  
K. Morsy ◽  
M. Al-Kahtani ◽  
A. Shati ◽  
A. El-Kott ◽  
R. Abdel-Gaber ◽  
...  

SummaryParapharyngodon (Oxyurida) is a lizard gastrointestinal nematode parasite with a life cycle including lizards as main hosts. However, some species are known to parasitize anurans. In the present study, P. japonicus isolated from the large intestine of the Egyptian changeable lizard, Agama mutabilis was described and illustrated. Forty five specimens of these animals were collected from south Sinai desert, Egypt during the period from May to September 2017. After necropsy, the body was opened by a longitudinal incision from vent to throat, and the gastrointestinal tract was removed. The esophagus, stomach, small and large intestines were examined separately for helminthes. The recovered nematodes were examined by light and scanning electron microscopy. Thirty six specimens (80.0 %) were found to be naturally infected. The parasite was robust with prominent cuticular transverse annulations. Mouth surrounded by three bilobed lips, each with tiny labial papillae. Three pairs of caudal papillae were observed in male worms; 1 pair precloacal, 1 pair sublateral in cloacal opening line, 1 pair in proximal region of caudal appendage on its narrowed point. The posterior extremity beard dorsally directed caudal appendages. Females were with a conical posterior end terminated at a terminal spike. Ovaries reached esophageal isthmus but not wrapped around corpus. The parasite recorded was compared morphologically and morphometrically with the most similar species, it was found that it was most similar to P. japonicus with new host and locality records.


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