| Literature DB >> 28188411 |
Franciszek Wojciech Kornobis1, Marek Renčo2, Anna Filipiak3.
Abstract
This paper presents the first geographical record of the needle nematode Longidorus artemisiae Rubtsova, Chizhov & Subbotin, 1999 outside Russia. This species was found in Poland near the city of Skierniewice in association with nettle (Urtica dioica L.). Morphometric and morphological data are provided, including the first description of juveniles of this species. Nematodes of the Polish population differ from the type-population in Russia in possessing a thicker body (lower 'a' index) in both sexes; males having a longer body and longer spicules; different sex ratio (1:2 in Polish population vs 1:1 in the type-population) and somewhat less expanded lips. Molecularly, the Polish population was characterised by sequencing D2-D3 28S rDNA and ITS1 markers. Additionally, new data on these two markers are provided for another species, Longidorus juglandicola Lišková, Robbins & Brown, 1997, obtained from topotype specimens from Slovakia. Surprisingly, despite the high morphological similarity of these two species, analysis of their phylogenetic position did not show close phylogenetic relation and several other species (less similar in general morphology) appeared more closely related to both L. artemisiae and L. juglandicola.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28188411 PMCID: PMC5337243 DOI: 10.1007/s11230-017-9703-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Parasitol ISSN: 0165-5752 Impact factor: 1.431
Morphometric data for Longidorus artemisiae adults of the population from Poland and the type-population from Russia (Rubtsova et al., 1999)
| Locality | Skierniewice (Poland) | Starocherkassk (Rostov region, Russia) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Host plant |
|
| ||
| Females (n = 13) | Males (n = 12) | Females (n = 26) | Males (n = 28) | |
| Range (mean ± SD) | Range (mean ± SD) | Range (mean ± SD) | Range (mean ± SD) | |
| L | 5282–6628 | 5630–7039 | 5100–6500 | 4700–6600 |
| a | 86.6–114.3 | 104.6–133.6 | 109–155 | 113–162 |
| b | 10.7–17.5 | 13.1–16.1 | 13.0–21.0 | 11.8–17.5 |
| c | 108–165 | 118–167 | 120–207 | 105–152 |
| c′ | 0.9–1.4 | 1.0–1.3 | 1.0–1.6 | 1.0–1.6 |
| d | 1.87–2.36 | 1.91–2.25 | – | – |
| d′ | 1.07–1.68 | 1.33–1.57 | – | – |
| V% | 46.5–51.4 | – | 46–51 | – |
| Odontostyle | 80–93 | 81–91 | 84–98 | 90–98 |
| Odontophore | 55–69 | (55–62) | 39–50 | 39–48 |
| Total stylet | 139–148 | 140–151 | 126–140 | 132–146 |
| Distance to guide ring | 28–33 | 31–36 | 27–34 | 28–34 |
| Oesophagus length | 320–547 | 401–469 | 382–464 | 354–452 |
| Pharyngeal bulb length | 111–146 | 104–127 | 98–119 | 99–116 |
| Pharyngeal bulb width | 20–23 | 18–25 | 19–25 | 17–22 |
| Tail length | 34–54 | 35–53 | 31–46 | 36–50 |
| Hyaline tip | 9–15 | 10–14 | – | – |
| Prerectum | – | – | 232–394 | – |
| Rectum | – | – | 23–35 | – |
| Width at lips | 14–16 | 15–16 | 14–17 | 14–17 |
| Width at guide ring | 17–25 | 20–24 | – | – |
| Width at base of pharynx | 44–49 | 43–47 | – | – |
| Width at vulva in females/midbody in males | 53–62 | 47–56 | 41–52 | 38–50 |
| Width at anus | 37–41 | 35–42 | 28–35 | 32–41 |
| Spicules | – | 47–56 | – | 39–49 |
| Ltgoa | 4828–6146 | 5171–6551 | 4700–6000 | 4900–6500 |
| L/Ltgo | 1.07–1.10 | 1.07–1.09 | 1.08–1.10 | 1.07–1.10 |
aLtgo, body length–oesophagus length–tail length; Note some values from the work of Rubtsova et al. (1999) are rounded
Fig. 1Longidorus artemisiae adults. A–G females; H–L males. A, Anterior body; B, Lips; C, F, Vulva; D, G, Tails; E, Amphidial fovea; H, Anterior body; B, Lips; J, Posterior body; K, L, Spicules and tails. Scale-bars: A–D, F–I, K–L, 20 µm; E, 10 µm; J, 40 µm
Morphometrics of juvenile Longidorus artemisiae of the population from Poland
| J1 (n = 5) | J2 (n = 4) | J3 (n = 4) | J4 (n = 10) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Range (mean) | Range (mean) | Range (mean) | Range (mean ± SD) | |
| L | 1123–1235 (1185) | 1827–2070 (1,941) | 2340–3170 (2750) | 3332–4840 (4134 ± 457) |
| a | 52.7–54.9 (53.8) | 64.9–72.4 (69.3) | 66.6–90.6 (77.9) | 86.9–116.9 (96.2 ± 8.5) |
| c | 24.4–27.1 (25.8) | 34–37.5 (35.4) | 45–70.4 (59.8) | 60.6–102.3 (84.7 ± 11.3) |
| c′ | 2.9–3.4 (3.1) | 2.5–2.6 (2.6) | 1.6–2 (1.8) | 1.3–1.8 (1.5 ± 0.2) |
| Odontostyle | 49–52 (50) | 53–58 (54) | 61–65 (63) | 69–78 (74 ± 2) |
| Replacement odontostyle | 52–56 (53) | 63–64 (63) | 69–80 (73) | 80–92 (85 ± 4) |
| Tail length | 43–51 (46) | 53–58 (55) | 44–52 (46) | 45–55 (49 ± 4) |
| Width at lips | 8–9 (8) | 10–11 (10) | 11–12 (12) | 11–14 (13 ± 1) |
| Width at mid-body | 22–23 (22) | 27–30 (28) | 35–37 (35) | 38–46 (43 ± 2) |
| Width at anus | 15–16 (15) | 20–23 (21) | 26–28 (27) | 31–36 (33 ± 2) |
Fig. 2Longidorus artemisiae juveniles. A–D, Anterior body of J1–J4, respectively; E–H, tail of J1–J4, respectively. Scale-bars: 10 µm
List of species used in the analyses and GenBank accession numbers for D2-D3 28S rDNA sequences
| Species | Accession number | Reference |
|---|---|---|
|
| KF242313–6 | Subbotin et al. ( |
| KX137849 | Present study | |
|
| AY601572 | He et al. ( |
| KR911851 | Kornobis et al. ( | |
|
| AF480072 | Rubtsova et al., ( |
|
| KJ802863 | Tzortzakakis et al. ( |
| KJ802866 | ||
|
| AY593056–7 | Unpublished |
|
| AF480076 | Rubtsova et al. ( |
| KF242305–6 | Subbotin et al. ( | |
|
| KF242331–3 | Subbotin et al. ( |
|
| KX137850 | Present study |
|
| KP222294 | Maafi et al. ( |
|
| KT308868 | Archidona-Yuste et al. ( |
| KF242311–2 | Subbotin et al. ( | |
| AF480074 | Rubtsova at al. (2001) | |
| AY593058 | Holterman et al. (unpublished) | |
|
| AM911623 | De Luca et al. ( |
|
| KJ802874; KJ802876a | Tzortzakakis et al. ( |
|
| AY601577 | He at al. (2005) |
|
| EF538754 | Kumari et al. ( |
|
| KF242335 | Subbotin et al. ( |
|
| KF242334 | Subbotin et al. ( |
|
| KF292280 | Subbotin et al. ( |
aSequences KJ802874 and KJ802876 are described in GenBank as L. moesicus and to avoid confusion we have used this name here. However, L. moesicus has been synonimised with Longidorus iranicus Sturhan & Barooti, 1983 by Maafi et al. (2015)
List of species used in the analyses and GenBank accession numbers for ITS1 sequences
| Species | Accession number | Reference |
|---|---|---|
|
| KX192397–9 | Present study |
| KX192400 | ||
|
| AF511414 | Ye et al. ( |
|
| KJ802892 | Tzortzakakis et al. ( |
|
| AF511417 | Ye et al. ( |
| AJ549986–7 | De Luca et al. ( | |
| GU199044 | Pedram et al. ( | |
|
| AF511418 | Ye et al. ( |
|
| AF511419 | Ye et al. ( |
|
| KP222295 | Maafi et al. ( |
|
| KX192395–6 | Present study |
|
| KJ802893 | Tzortzakakis et al. ( |
|
| KP406947 | Subbotin et al. ( |
|
| KT593863 | Roshan-Bakhsh et al. ( |
|
| KJ802894 | Tzortzakakis et al. ( |
|
| FJ009679 | Niknam et al. ( |
|
| FJ009680 | Niknam et al. ( |
|
| AY430175 | He et al. (unpublished) |
Fig. 3Bayesian inference phylogenetic trees including L. artemisiae and L. juglandicola (sequences indicated in bold) based on: A, D2-D3 28S rDNA marker; B, ITS1