Oxyascaris annulatum, Santos & Willkens & Silva & Melo & Fernandes, 2023
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.ijppaw.2023.11.001 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13904311 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0380F307-1F6A-DB7E-FCE3-FE08FAF8E3DC |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Oxyascaris annulatum |
status |
sp. nov. |
Oxyascaris annulatum n. sp. Santos, Melo & Fernandes, 2023
Type-host: Leptodeira annulata Linnaeus, 1758
Site in host: small intestine
Type-locality: Riachao ˜, Maranh˜ao (7 ◦ 30′33.8″ S 46 ◦ 23′02.9″W) GoogleMaps
Type-material: The holotype ( MPEG 285 ) GoogleMaps and paratypes ( MPEG 288 ), GoogleMaps the allotype ( MPEG 286 ) GoogleMaps and paratypes ( MPEG 287 ) are deposited in the Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi (MPEG) Bel´em, Par´a, Brazil GoogleMaps .
ZooBank registration: To comply with the regulations set out in article 8.5 of the amended 2012 version of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature ( ICZN, 2012), details of the new species have been submitted to ZooBank. The Life Science Identifier (LSID) for Oxyascaris annulatum is urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3FC55064-3729-43D0-8D9A-A95B7D9665B7 .
Etymology: The name of the species is given in reference to the type host Leptodeira annulata .
Description ( Figs. 1 View Fig and 2 View Fig )
2.1. General
Evident sexual dimorphism, mature females four times larger than males in total length. Females presenting a vesicle at anterior region of body, with a wider portion beginning at cephalic region, extending to nerve ring, narrowing towards esophageal bulb ( Fig. 1E View Fig ). Oral opening at cephalic end, triangular in shape, with three lips; dorsal lip with a pair of papillae; lateroventral lips with one papilla and one amphid each ( Fig. 1B View Fig and 2A, D View Fig ). Esophagus divided into pharynx, corpus, isthmus and bulb ( Fig. 1B, E View Fig ). Nerve ring at posterior third of esophagus in males and at middle of esophagus in females ( Fig. 1B, E View Fig ). Excretory pore postbulbar or at the bulb level in males and pre-bulbar in females ( Figs.1B, E View Fig and 2E View Fig ). Numerous somatic papillae present at cuticular surface in both sexes, randomly distributed ( Fig. 2E View Fig ). Discrete lateral line in females ( Fig. 2C View Fig ), absent in males. Tail conical, robust, tapering abruptly to a short filament in both sexes ( Figs. 1C, G View Fig and 2C, F View Fig ).
2.2. Males (based on the holotype and 6 paratypes)
Total body length 5.5 mm (3.8–5.7 mm; 5.08) mm, body width at level of esophagus-intestinal junction 179 (116–202; 168). Esophagus 434 (387–547; 463) long; pharynx 42 (37–55; 45) × 47 (37–47; 42), corpus 324 (314–418; 361) × 53 (53–79; 59); isthmus 47 (32–79; 50) × 42 (36–47; 40), bulb 66 (66–84; 75) × 68 (58–76; 72) respectively. Nerve ring at 253 (166–284; 242) and excretory pore 550 (390–518; 471) from anterior end, respectively. Caudal papillae slightly larger in size than somatic papillae, 17 in total (3 + 1:1:3): three pairs of ventral precloacal papillae; one large unpaired medial precloacal papilla at anterior border of cloacal aperture ( Fig. 2G View Fig ); one pair of ventral adcloacal papillae ( Fig. 2G View Fig ); three pairs of postcloacal papillae (the first postcloacal pair ventral, the second lateroventral, and the third pair ventral) ( Fig. 1C View Fig and 2F, G View Fig ). Two small lateral phasmids located at tail tip. Spicules curved distally, right spicule 149 (84–174; 137) and left spicule 184 (120–180; 152) long ( Fig. 1D View Fig ). Gubernaculum absent. Tail 287 (234–334) long ( Fig. 1C View Fig and 2F View Fig ).
2.3. Female (based on allotype and 4 paratypes)
Total body length 22 mm (18–24; 21), body width at level of esophagus-intestinal junction 295 (213–350; 272). Esophagus 668 (739–929; 802) long; pharynx 68 (53–74; 62) × 74 (58–74; 64); corpus 666 (571–724; 637) × 129 (100–132; 124); isthmus 58 (26–108; 64) × 73 (63–73; 70); bulb 124 (92–105; 99) × 118 (108–139; 120). Nerve ring at 347 (276–418; 342) and excretory pore at 634 (516–671; 579) from anterior end, respectively. Vulva pre-equatorial, lips not protruded ( Fig. 2B View Fig ), located at 8 mm (6.4–8.2, corresponding 34–35% of the total body length; 7.3) from anterior end. Didelphic and amphidelphic genital apparatus. Vagina muscular, directed anteriorly, flexed to posterior region throughout most of length, giving rise to one uterine branche directed anteriorly and one branch directed posteriorly. Uterine branches associated with an ovary each. Anterior and posterior region of uterus branch with a dilated portion, flexed posteriorly, usually filled with spermatozoa ( Fig. 1F, H View Fig ). Body width at the level of vulva 547 (500–639; 576). Eggs oval, often larvated 82 (82–103) long and 66 (65–68) wide ( Fig. 1I View Fig ). Tail 1 mm (0.974–1.1 mm; 480) long ( Fig. 1F View Fig ; 2C View Fig ).
3. Remarks
We assigned the nematodes presented in this study to the Cosmocercidae by the evident sexual dimorphism compared to other cosmocercid genera, primarily the total length of females (mature females more than twice as large as males). Additionally, the nematodes have three distinct lips, females didelphic amphidelphic, uteri with one branch directed anteriorly and one posteriorly filled with numerous small eggs; tail conical robust, males without pre-anal pseudosucker. According to Travassos (1920), Freitas (1958), and Bursey and Goldberg (2007), those morphological traits can be attributed to species of the genus Oxyascaris .
The species of this genus are distinguished based on a combination of the following morphological characters: presence or absence of unpaired medial papillae located at the anterior cloacal lip, the number and distribution of caudal papillae, the presence or absence of lateral body alae in males and females, presence or absence of gubernaculum, length of spicules in males, and position of the vulva relative to the anterior end of the body in females ( Freitas 1958; Baker and Vaucher 1985; Bursey and Goldberg 2007).
Oxyascaris comprises six known species: Oxyascaris caatingae , O. caudacutus , O. oxyascaris , O. similis , O. longum and O. mcdiarmidi ). The new species is distinguished from O. mcdiarmidi by the absence of the gubernaculum (present in O. mcdiarmidi ) and the presence of an unpaired papilla on the upper lip of the cloaca (absent in O. mcdiarmidi ). The new species is similar to O. oxyascaris by lacking gubernaculum, but differs by the presence of the unpaired papilla on the upper lip of the cloaca ( Freitas, 1958; Bursey and Goldberg, 2007; Felix-Nascimento et al., 2020; Alcantara et al., 2021; Santos et al., 2023).
The new species shares the presence of an unpaired papilla at the anterior cloacal lip with O. caatingae , O. caudacutus , and O. similis . However, Oxyascaris annulatum n. sp. differs from O. caatingae by the total number of caudal papillae pairs (7 pairs + 1 unpaired vs 15 pairs + 1, respectively), as well as in the distribution of papillae (3:1:3 vs 5:1: 9 in O. caatingae , papillae distribution formula pre-: ad-: post-cloacal). Additionally, the males of the new species lack gubernaculum, while it is present in males of O. caatingae ( Felix-Nascimento et al., 2020) .
The males of Oxyascaris annulatum n. sp. and O. caudacutus do not have gubernaculum (based on Freitas, 1958). However, they differ in the total number of papillae pairs (7 pairs + 1 vs 13 pairs + 1 in O. caudacutus ), and the distribution of papillae (3:1:3 vs 6:0: 7 in O. caudacutus ) and also by females with a discreet lateral line in the new species (wide lateral alae in O. caudacutus ). Additionally, the new species is larger than O. caudacutus (males: 3.8–5.7 mm and females: 18–24 mm vs males: 2.78–3.62 mm and females: 5.63–16.21 mm, respectively). In both species, the vulva is located in the pre-equatorial region of the body. Still, they differ in the distance of the vulva from the anterior region (6.4–8.2 mm, corresponding 34–35% of the total body in the new species vs 2.01–5.33, corresponding 25–32% of the whole body in O. caudacutus ) ( Freitas, 1958).
The new species resembles O. similis by the absence of the Gubernaculum, but they can be easily distinguished by a discrete lateral line in females of O. annulatum n. sp., while in O. similis the lateral alae is present in both sexes, and they differ by the number and distribution of caudal papillae pairs (7 + 1/3:1: 3 in the new species vs 13 + 1/6:0: 7 in O. similis ). The position of the vulva differs in both species (6.4–8.2 mm, corresponding 34–35% of the total body in the new species vs 3.52–14.07 mm, corresponding 43–51% of the whole body in O. similis ), as well as the position of the nerve ring in males and females (males: 166–284 and females: 276–418 in Oxyascaris n. sp. vs males: 270–460 and females: 310–700 in O. similis ) ( Freitas, 1958).
Oxyascaris longum was originally described as Aplectana longa , and in a recent study conducted by Santos et al. (2023) (in press), the species was reallocated into the genus Oxyascaris . Therefore, the new species differs from O. longum by the absence of a gubernaculum (present in O. longum ), the presence of discrete lateral alae (lateral line) in O. annulatum n. sp. (absent in O. longum ), and the pattern of caudal papillae, which in the new species is 3:1:3 + 1, whereas, in O. longum , it is 9:0:6 + 1. Additionally, O. annulatum n. sp. has a pre-equatorial vulva; in O. longum , the vulva is equatorial ( Alcantara et al., 2021).
MPEG |
Brazil, Para, Belem, Museu Paraense Emilio Goeldi |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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