Diaphorocleidus forcipiformis Silva, Meneses, Cohen and Justo, 2024

Silva, Marciara Lopes, Cohen, Simone Chinicz, Ottoni, Felipe Polivanov, Viana, Diego Carvalho, Meneses, Yuri Costa De & Justo, Marcia Cristina Nascimento, 2024, Two new species of Diaphorocleidus and new data on D. affinis (Monogenoidea: Dactylogyridae) parasitizing Bryconops cf. affinis (Characiformes: Iguanodectidae) from the Munim River basin, State of Maranhão, northeastern Brazil, Zootaxa 5403 (1), pp. 91-103 : 95-97

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5403.1.6

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0C3D7428-8B33-46F5-AC53-2C4D96E0E4F5

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10572762

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0384F651-FF9A-8770-FF2F-0DCFFE4C1F6D

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Diaphorocleidus forcipiformis Silva, Meneses, Cohen and Justo
status

sp. nov.

Diaphorocleidus forcipiformis Silva, Meneses, Cohen and Justo n. sp. ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 )

Type-host: Bryconops cf. affinis (Günther)

Site of infestation: Gills

Type-locality: Rural area of Chapadinha in the “Riacho Feio” (03º51’18.1’’S 043º17’14.0’’W) GoogleMaps and urban area of Anapurus in the “Riacho Estrela” (03°40’15.6”S 043°7’9.7”W), tributaries of the Munim River, Munim Basin, Maranhão, Brazil GoogleMaps .

Parasitological indexes: Total number of hosts: 64; number of infected hosts: 25; total number of parasites: 151; Range of intensity: 1–23

Specimens deposited: Holotype CHIOC 40276 View Materials , Paratypes CHIOC: 40277, 40278, 40279 a–b

Etymology: The specific name is from Latin (forceps = clamp; formis = shape of) and refers to the shape of the accessory piece.

Description (Based on 28 specimens mounted in Hoyer’s medium). Body fusiform, flattened dorsoventrally, 382 (198–622; n = 28) long by 151 (71–324, n = 28) greatest width. Tegument thin and smooth. Cephalic lobes developed; three bilateral pairs of head organs; cephalic glands indistinct. Two pairs of eyes, equidistant, anterior pair smaller than posterior. Pharynx spherical 17 (15–18; n = 7) in diameter. Two intestinal caeca, confluent posteriorly to gonads, without diverticula. Gonads overlapping, intercaecal; testis, dorsoposterior to germarium, 25 (22–27; n = 4) long by 23 (18–28; n = 4) wide. Germarium 59 (43–75; n = 4) long, 32 (26–43; n = 4) wide. Vagina with a sinistral submarginal vaginal opening, consisting of a thin sclerotized tube with an oval seminal receptacle, anterior to the germarium. Vitelline follicles scattered throughout the trunk, absent around other reproductive organs ( Fig. 3A View FIGURE 3 ). Eggs, Mehlis’ gland and ootype not observed ( Fig. 3A View FIGURE 3 ). Copulatory complex comprising male copulatory organ (MCO) and accessory piece. MCO sclerotized, tubular 107 (82–136, n = 16) in total length, coiled with 2 ½ rings counterclockwise, first ring 17 (16–19, n = 7) in diameter; base forming a small tube with two circular flanges. Accessory piece bifurcated, claw-shaped, with parts similar in shape and size, one of them distally bifid, serving as a guide for distal portion of MCO, 33 (28–37, n = 7) long by 19 (13–27; n = 21) wide ( Fig. 3B View FIGURE 3 ). Peduncle short. Haptor subhexagonal 110 (82–146; n = 23) wide, with anchor/bar complex, 7 pairs of hooks ( Fig. 3A View FIGURE 3 ). Anchors dissimilar in size and shape. Ventral anchor with well-developed superficial and deep roots; superficial root elongate, subrectangular shape, slightly straight shaft, short point, 29 (23–33, n = 10) long, base 17 (15–20, n = 10) wide ( Fig. 3D View FIGURE 3 ); dorsal anchor with a bump at the proximal portion of the superficial root, evenly curved shaft and short point, 18 (14–20, n = 10) long, base 14 (11–17, n = 10) wide ( Fig. 3C View FIGURE 3 ). Ventral bar, robust, V-shaped, rounded in lateral ends, 39 (31–48, n = 10) ( Fig. 3E View FIGURE 3 ); dorsal bar thin, long, broadly U-shaped, 37 (30–42, n = 10) long ( Fig. 3F View FIGURE 3 ). Hooks similar in shape, with 2 equal subunits, protruding thumb, shaft and delicate point: Pairs 1 and 5, 16 (13–18, n = 18) reduced in size, pairs 2, 3, 6 and 7, 19 (16–22; n = 36), pair 4 longer than the others, 21 (20–23; n = 9); FH loop approximately 50% of the shank length ( Fig. 3G View FIGURE 3 ).

Remarks: The new species resembles D. petrosusi Mendoza-Franco, Aguirre-Macedo & Vidal-Martínez, 2007 by the shape of the accessory piece, but differs in size (18 [16–20] in D. petrosusi ; 33 [28–37] in the new species) and by the bifid termination in one of the processes of the accessory piece in the new species. The new species differs from D. armillatus , D. microstomus (Mizelle, Kristky & Crane, 1968) and D. magnus Zago, Franceschini, Abdallah, Müller, Azevedo & da Silva, 2021 in the morphology of the accessory piece (variable, plate-like in D. armillatus and D. microstomus , and robust, comprising two subunits, wrench-shaped in D. magnus ). With respect to the number of rings of male copulatory organ, D. forcipiformis n. sp. resembles D. armillatus which presents 2 rings, D. magnus with 2 ½ and D. microstomus with 1 ½ to 2 ½ rings. The new species also resembles D. armillatus , D. microstomus and D. magnus by the size of the hooks, in which pairs 1 and 5 are smaller than the others, but differs from them by the morphology of the anchors (absence of medial root at the base of the dorsal anchor in D. armillatus and D. magnus ).

CHIOC

Helminthological Collection of Oswaldo Cruz Institute (Coleccion. Helmintologica del Instituto Oswaldo Cruz)

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