| Literature DB >> 35178303 |
Zouhour El Mouna Ayadi1, Fadila Tazerouti1, Delphine Gey2, Jean-Lou Justine3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The family Plectanocotylidae includes parasites of the gills of marine fish; although nine genera and about 20 species have been described, almost no molecular information is available. Putting aside Plectanocotyle elliptica Diesing, 1850, supposedly a parasite of the white perch Morone americana, never found again since its original description, two species were valid within Plectanocotyle Diesing, 1850 before this work: Plectanocotyle gurnardi (Van Beneden & Hesse, 1863) Llewellyn, 1941 and Plectanocotyle major Boudaya, Neifar & Euzet, 2006.Entities:
Keywords: Barcoding; Mediterranean sea; Monogenea; Scorpaeniformes; Taxonomy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35178303 PMCID: PMC8815378 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.12873
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Fish and monogeneans, and their morphological and molecular identifications.
| Fish id | Fish morphological identification | Fish COI GenBank # | Fish molecular identification (BOLD) | Monogenean id | Monogenean morphological identification | Monogenean COI GenBank # | Monogenean slides deposited |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Br23 |
|
| Br23Mo1 |
| HEL1723 | ||
| Br23Mo2 |
| HEL1724 | |||||
| Br23Mo3 |
| HEL1725 | |||||
| Br26 |
|
| Br26Mo1 |
| HEL1727 | ||
| Br26Mo3 |
| HEL1728 | |||||
| Br29 |
|
| Br29Mo1 |
|
| HEL1738 | |
| Br29Mo2 |
|
| HEL1739 | ||||
| Br29Mo3 |
|
| HEL1740 | ||||
| Br 30 |
|
| Br30Mo1 |
| HEL1726 | ||
| Br 31 |
|
| Br31Mo3 |
| HEL1729 | ||
| Br31Mo4 |
| HEL1730 | |||||
| Br31Mo5 |
| HEL1731 | |||||
| Br 32 |
|
| Br32Mo1 |
| HEL1732 | ||
| Br32Mo2 |
| HEL1733 | |||||
| Br32Mo3 |
| HEL1734 | |||||
| Br 33 |
|
| Br33Mo1 |
|
| HEL1735 | |
| Br 36 |
| – | – | Br36Mo1 |
|
| HEL1736 |
| Br 37 |
|
| Br37Mo1 |
|
| HEL1737 |
Note:
Note that traceability was ensured by labelling and barcoding fish individuals and their respective monogenean parasites. New data include eight new sequences of fish and 18 new sequences of monogeneans. In addition, some fish were barcoded but monogenean sequences from the same fish were not retrieved. These were registered in GenBank as: MW788683: Br34 Chelidonichthys obscurus 100%; MW788684: Br35 Chelidonichthys obscurus 99.85%; MW788686: Br38 Chelidonichthys obscurus 100%; and MW788687: Br39 Chelidonichthys obscurus 99.69% (percentages are BOLD similarity). Some monogeneans with voucher slides did not provide molecular sequences (slides HEL1741–1750).
Figure 1Molecular phylogenetic analysis of all available members of the Plectanocotylidae.
The tree was obtained by the ML method from COI sequences. All available sequences were used (18 new sequences + 3 from GenBank). Each species is represented by a clade with high bootstrap value. The two sequences from monogeneans collected in France (Jovelin & Justine, 2001) are assigned each to a clade: “Plectanocotyle sp.” to the P. lastovizae clade, and “Octoplectanocotyla obscurum” to the Triglicola obscura clade. Bootstrap values for nodes higher than species are low; Triglicola obscura is not a sister-group to Plectanocotyle in this tree. Scale: base differences per site.
Figure 2Molecular phylogenetic analysis of selected members of the Plectanocotylidae.
Only clean COI sequences were selected and the dataset had 396 positions for sequences 396 base pairs in length. The tree was obtained by the Maximum Likelihood method and a similar tree was obtained by the NJ method; bootstrap values for ML below branches, for NJ above branches. Each nominal species is represented by a distinct clade with high bootstrap values (97–99 ML; 100 NJ). Plectanocotyle lastovizae is sister-group to P. major (90 ML; 88 NJ). A sister-group relationship between Triglicola obscura and a clade formed by the three Plectanocotyle species was found, but with low values (54 ML; 75 NJ). Scale: base differences per site.
Genetic distances between COI sequences of Monogeneans.
| p-distances |
|
|
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| |||
|
| 7.80 |
| ||
|
| 10.90 | 10.30 |
| |
|
| 11.87 | 12.55 | 11.75 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |||
|
| 8.31 |
| ||
|
| 11.83 | 11.11 |
| |
|
| 13.00 | 13.82 | 12.99 |
|
Note:
Distances are percentages based on the matrix including only clean sequences. Kimura-2 and p-distances are indicated. Italics: distance within species. Distances within species are low, ranging from 0% to 0.68%; distances between species are high, ranging from 7.80% to 13.82%.
Species of Plectanocotylidae and their hosts.
Nine genera were recognized in the family Plectanocotylidae Monticelli, 1903 in WoRMS (2021) but after Mamaev we consider that Plectanocotyloides is a junior synonym of Triglicola. We include Octolabea, although it was separated from the Plectanocotylidae by Yamaguti (1963). Genera are in alphabetical order. Finally, this table includes nine genera and 20 species.
Measurements of species of Plectanocotyle.
|
|
| |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hosts |
|
|
|
|
| Localities | Algeria | Algeria | Algeria | Tunisia |
| Source | Present study | Present study | Present study |
|
| Body length | 2120 ± 350 (1,100–3,000, | 2,330 ± 260 (1,900–2,800, | 4,020 (3,380–4,400, | 1,841 (1,500–2,300, |
| Body width | 310 ± 50 (200–430, | 366 ± 41 (250–430, | 472 (370–850, | 442 (210–600, |
| Buccal organ length | 38 (30–46, | 41 (29–53, | 60 (58–62, | |
| Buccal organ width | 34 (25–45, | 30 (20–73, | 59 (55–62, | 48 (40–60, |
| Pharynx length | 48 (38–60, | 60 (50–77, | 69 (68–70, | |
| Pharynx width | 42 (30–56, | 56 (45–70, | 69 (67–70, | 45 (30–70, |
| Clamp length | 125 (90–180, | 94 (80–103, | 181 (175–195, | 137 (90–160, |
| Clamp width | 101 (35–135, | 82 (70–90, | 139 (125–160, | 110 (85–140, |
| Sclerites ‘a’ length | 60 (51–70, | 53 (42–60, | 89 (88–90, | 80 (75–90, |
| Sclerites ‘b’ length | 75 (63–85, | 76 (60–84, | 127 (123–132, | 157 (140–180, |
| Sclerites ‘c’ length | 63 (52–95, | 61 (49–76, | 83 (80–90, | 72 (65–90, |
| Sclerites ‘d’ length | 20 (12–26, | 27 (20–35, | 32 (30–35, | 67 (55–70, |
| Sclerites ‘e’ length | 25 (15–32, | 30 (26–32, | 28 (27–28, | 33 (25–40, |
| Terminal lappet length | 265 (160–375, | 77 (50–115, | 61 (56–75, | 56 (40–80, |
| Terminal lappet width | 42 (25–70, | 52 (40–62, | 40 (36–45, | 42 (30–50, |
| Median hamulus length | 54 (45–60, | 35 (20–51, | 74 (27–86, | 32.5 (25–40, |
| Lateral hamulus length | 54 (42–62, | 43 (23–53, | 77 (37–88, | 33 (30–35, |
| Postero-lateral uncinulus length | 9 (5–13, | 11 (6–15, | 17 (8–20, | 12 (10–15, |
| MCO, Peripheral spine length | 112 (90–162, | 107 (90–125, | 113 (112–114, | 107 (90–120, |
| MCO, Median spine length | 78 (57–90, | 83 (75–97, | 75 (73–76, | 102 (85–110, |
| Number of testes | 13 (11–15, | 23 (14–35, | 20 (19–20, | 21 (19–22, |
| Testis length | 63 (45–83, | 69 (50–115, | 86 (75–100, | 57 (30–70, |
| Testis width | 65 (40–90, | 68 (45–86, | 73 (50–86, | 76 (50–90, |
| Egg length | 151 (143–161, | 147 (143–150, | – | 146 (120–185, |
Note:
Measurements of three species of Plectanocotyle collected off Algeria are provided, with a comparison with P. major from Tunisia