Literature DB >> 18576867

A new genus and species of proteocephalidean (Cestoda) from Clarias catfishes (Siluriformes: Clariidae) in Africa.

Alain de Chambrier1, Tomás Scholz, Moges Beletew, Jean Mariaux.   

Abstract

A new proteocephalidean cestode is described from 2 catfishes, Clarias gariepinus (type host) and C. cf. anguillaris (Siluriformes: Clariidae), from Ethiopia (type locality), Sudan, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe, and a new genus, Barsonella, is proposed to accommodate it. The genus belongs to the Proteocephalinae because its genital organs (testes, ovary, vitellarium, and uterus) are situated in the medulla. Barsonella lafoni, the type and only species of the new genus, is characterized mainly by the possession of an additional opening of each sucker; circular musculature on the anterior margin of suckers, serving as a sphincter; a small thin-walled glandular apical organ; absence of well-developed osmoregulatory canals in mature, pregravid, and gravid proglottids; and a large strobila, up to 173 mm long and 3.2 mm wide. Species of Marsypocephalus Wedl, 1861 (Marsypocephalinae), other large-sized proteocephalidean tapeworms occurring sympatrically in African catfishes (Clarias and Heterobranchus) and also possessing a sphincter-like, circular musculature on the anterior part of suckers, differ from B. lafoni in the absence of an additional sucker opening and glandular apical organ, the cortical position of the testes, well-developed osmoregulatory canals throughout the strobila, and a large cirrus sac. Proteocephalus glanduligerus (Janicki, 1928), another cestode parasitic in Clarias spp. in Africa, is much smaller than B. lafoni (maximum length 15 mm), has suckers without additional opening and circular musculature on the suckers, a large-sized glandular organ, much larger than suckers, and well-developed osmoregulatory canals. Comparison of partial sequences of the 28S rRNA gene for 7 samples of B. lafoni from 2 different hosts and 4 localities in Ethiopia, Sudan, and Tanzania has shown a very low genetic variability. In a limited phylogenetic analysis, B. lafoni formed a clade with Corallobothrium solidum Fritsch, 1886 (Proteocephalidae: Corallobothriinae), an African electric catfish parasite. This clade was the sister group of almost all Neotropical taxa from pimelodid and other catfishes.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 18576867     DOI: 10.1645/GE-1594.1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Parasitol        ISSN: 0022-3395            Impact factor:   1.276


  6 in total

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Authors:  Bruna Trevisan; Juliana F Primon; Fernando P L Marques
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-09-27       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Revision of Wenyonia Woodland, 1923 (Cestoda: Caryophyllidea) from catfishes (Siluriformes) in Africa.

Authors:  Bjoern C Schaeffner; Miloslav Jirků; Zuheir N Mahmoud; Tomáš Scholz
Journal:  Syst Parasitol       Date:  2011-05-05       Impact factor: 1.431

3.  Redescription of Testudotaenia testudo (Magath, 1924) (Eucestoda: Proteocephalidea), a parasite of Apalone spinifera (Le Sueur) (Reptilia: Trionychidae) and Amia calva L. (Pisces: Amiidae) in North America and erection of the Testudotaeniinae n. subfam.

Authors:  Alain de Chambrier; Sandrine C Coquille; Jean Mariaux; Vasyl Tkach
Journal:  Syst Parasitol       Date:  2009-04-01       Impact factor: 1.431

4.  A large 28S rDNA-based phylogeny confirms the limitations of established morphological characters for classification of proteocephalidean tapeworms (Platyhelminthes, Cestoda).

Authors:  Alain de Chambrier; Andrea Waeschenbach; Makda Fisseha; Tomáš Scholz; Jean Mariaux
Journal:  Zookeys       Date:  2015-04-27       Impact factor: 1.546

5.  Surface Ultrastructure of the Adult and Juvenile Stages of the Trematode Astiotrema Impletum (Looss, 1899) Looss 1900 (incertae Sedis) from the Nile puffer, Tetraodon Lineatus Linnaeus, 1758.

Authors:  S G Abd El-Kareem; M H Ibraheem
Journal:  Helminthologia       Date:  2021-06-08       Impact factor: 1.184

6.  First report of monogenean flatworms from Lake Tana, Ethiopia: gill parasites of the commercially important Clarias gariepinus (Teleostei: Clariidae) and Oreochromis niloticus tana (Teleostei: Cichlidae).

Authors:  Moges Beletew; Abebe Getahun; Maarten P M Vanhove
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2016-07-25       Impact factor: 3.876

  6 in total

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