Plasmodium relictum quentini, Chavatte & Grès & Snounou & Chabaud & Landau, 2009
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5252/z2009n2a8 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6029414C-FF9F-3A67-D99C-FF47FC7AFE35 |
treatment provided by |
Marcus |
scientific name |
Plasmodium relictum quentini |
status |
subsp. nov. |
Chavatte & Landau, n. subsp. ( Fig. 1E View FIG )
Plasmodium relictum – Chavatte & Landau 2007 (parasite of Pica pica ).
TYPE MATERIAL. — Holotype: France. Landes , Saint- Julien-en-Born, 44°03’42’’N, 1°13’33’’W, blood smear of A. arvensis number 740U, 25.X.1996 ( MNHN 440 About MNHN LV PXIII, 62) ( Fig. 3E View FIG ). GoogleMaps
Paratypes:same data as holotype, blood smears of A. arvensis number 740U, 25.X.1996 ( MNHN P2 About MNHN -XXV, 24-43) GoogleMaps ; 741U, 25.X.1996 ( MNHN P2 About MNHN -XXV, 44-64) .
ETYMOLOGY. — This subspecies is dedicated to Jean- Claude Quentin.
DISTRIBUTION. — Seine-Saint-Denis, France ( Chavatte et al. 2007) and type locality, Saint-Julien-en-Born, Landes, France.
HOSTS. — Alauda arvensis (type host) ; Pica pica .
DESCRIPTION
The schizonts lie in an enlarged and often rounded and sometimes discoloured RBC, whose condensed and sub-globular nuclei is pushed to the periphery. The schizont’s 12 to 18 nuclei are dense, rounded and well delimited. Initially peripheral and slightly protruding towards the outside, the nuclei are then distributed to the interior of the schizont. The cytoplasm is clear with a few white sharp-edged vacuoles. The pigment is most often central with the fine grains gathered up. The gametocytes are rounded and induce the same alterations in the RBC as the schizonts.
TAXONOMIC STATUS
The specimens studied are identical to the species described from the magpie ( Chavatte et al. 2007) where it was identified to P. relictum . However, this parasite presented some minor differences with respect to the P. relictum re-described ( Landau et al. 2003), in Passer domesticus , namely, a more pronounced RBC deformation, and crown of nuclei that are more regular and protuberant than those in the sparrow. The authors opted then to designate these parasites as P. relictum , as these differences are rather minor. However, since both the parasites of the lark and the magpie display these very same differential characters, we consider that in these two hosts they represent a vicariant form of the P. relictum described in the sparrow. We designate it as P. relictum quentini n. subsp. (= P. relictum sensu Chavatte & Landau 2007 , parasite of Pica pica ).
MNHN |
Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle |
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.