Literature DB >> 30649702

Diaphorocleidus machacae n. sp. (Monogenea) Infecting the Gill Lamellae of Brycon guatemalensis (Characiformes: Bryconidae) from the Rio Lacantún Basin in Chiapas, Mexico.

Edgar F Mendoza-Franco1, Juan M Caspeta-Mandujano2, Carlos Ramírez-Martínez3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: There are currently nine known gill monogenean species of Diaphorocleidus Jogunoori et al. (Systematic Parasitology 58:115-124, 2004) (Dactylogyridae) which are dispersed within and/or among five fish families in the Neotropical Characiformes: Bryconidae, Acestrorhynchidae, Characidae, Iguanodectidae, and Hemiodontidae. During a fish parasitological study carried out in the Rio Lacantún from Chiapas, Mexico, a new species of Diaphorocleidus on the gill lamellae of Brycon guatemalensis Regan, 1908, was discovered.
OBJECTIVE: Our objective was to morphologically describe the new parasite species by comparing it with previously described species of Diaphorocleidus and other known dactylogyrids on Characiformes.
METHODS: Worms were fixed with 4-5% formalin solution, observed and measured as temporary or permanent mounts stained with Gomori's trichrome, and mounted in Canada balsam. In addition, some specimens were mounted on slides using a mixture of lactic acid (LA) and glycerin-ammonium picrate (GAP) and then remounted in Canada balsam to obtain measurements of the haptoral structures and copulatory complex. Drawings were made with the aid of a drawing tube using a Leica microscope DM2500 with Nomarski interference contrast.
RESULTS: The new species differs from previously described congeneric species in having comparatively biggest body size [i.e., 800-1200 µm vs. 222-340 µm in Diaphorocleidus armillatus Jogunoori et al. (Systematic Parasitology 58:115-124, 2004) (type species of the genus)]; two prostatic reservoirs; rod-shaped accessory piece; a sucker-like structure associated with the genital pore; vaginal duct looping left intestinal cecum and opening on the dextro-dorsal margin of body; anchors with conspicuous basal folds on the deep roots weakly developed.
CONCLUSIONS: Consistently with the previous phylogenetic hypotheses about the origin of bryconids (20 mya late Oligocene-early Miocene) in Central America, that morphological differentiation in D. machacae n. sp. in Mexico may somewhat reflect the insights of an early dispersal of a common ancestor of Diaphorocleidus to the area in comparison with that of a late invasion of their congeners [i.e., according to the origin of B. petrosus (10 mya) 10 mya] in Central America. The present finding brings to ten, the number of known species of Diaphorocleidus, and represents the second described species of this genus occurring in a freshwater native host in Mexico.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Biogeography; Central America; Dactylogyridae; Diaphorocleidus; Freshwater fish; Southeast Mexico

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30649702     DOI: 10.2478/s11686-018-00007-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Parasitol        ISSN: 1230-2821            Impact factor:   1.440


  2 in total

Review 1.  Historical biogeography of the Isthmus of Panama.

Authors:  Egbert G Leigh; Aaron O'Dea; Geerat J Vermeij
Journal:  Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc       Date:  2013-07-19

2.  Patterns of interaction between Neotropical freshwater fishes and their gill Monogenoidea (Platyhelminthes).

Authors:  Mariana P Braga; Sabrina B L Araújo; Walter A Boeger
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  2013-11-13       Impact factor: 2.289

  2 in total

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