Neochordodes occidentalis ( Montgomery, 1898 )

Schmidt-Rhaesa, Andreas & Menzel, Lena, 2005, Central American and Caribbean species of horsehair worms (Nematomorpha), with the description of three new species, Journal of Natural History 39 (7), pp. 515-529 : 525

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930400001400

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/66756849-C451-F235-C318-FF3CFCB7FA12

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Neochordodes occidentalis ( Montgomery, 1898 )
status

 

Neochordodes occidentalis ( Montgomery, 1898) View in CoL

( Figure 2D, E View Figure 2 )

Chordodes occidentalis Montgomery 1898: 50–52 .

Neochordodes occidentalis: Poinar and Doelman 1974: 328–330 View in CoL .

Pseudochordodes occidentalis: de Miralles and de Villalobos 1993: 108 .

Material studied

Two newly reported males from Mammoth Tusk Cave and Veracruz, Mexico; LM and SEM .

Description

The two male specimens from Mexico measure 16 and 18 cm in length, and 0.9 and 1.1 mm in diameter, respectively. The body colour is a medium brown, the anterior tip is white, a dark collar is not present. The posterior end of the males is round, without tail lobes. The cloacal opening is surrounded by short spines, further, very short spines are distributed in the ventral region around the cloacal opening.

The cuticle contains one type of areole, that varies in shape from rounded to polygonal ( Figure 2D, E View Figure 2 ). The interareolar grooves are very narrow and contain only few bristles ( Figure 2E View Figure 2 ). A megareolar pattern (see P. bulbareolatus ) is not clearly visible. In some instances, areoles approach very close, but tubercles could not be observed.

Comments

Previous descriptions of N. occidentalis are heterogeneous (see Schmidt-Rhaesa et al. 2003). It is not quite clear, whether this indicates that N. occidentalis is a polymorphic species or whether more than one species are summarized under this name. However, the newly reported specimens from Mexico correspond in the cuticular ultrastructure to the holotype from California, USA ( Montgomery 1898; see also reinvestigation by Schmidt-Rhaesa et al. 2003). Due to the presence of a single type of areole (which is very variable), we follow here the assignment to the genus Neochordodes .

Distribution

New records. Mexico: Mammoth Tusk Cave, San Francisco, one male, coll. 5 January 1976 by D. Lowery and P. Strickland; Veracruz, Sumidero de Tlaltenango (1.4 km N Tlaquilpa), 2330 m, one male, coll. 23 March 1995 by C. Savas (both Texas Memorial Museum, Austin, USA, no accession number) .

Further distribution. USA (California, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wyoming; see Schmidt-Rhaesa et al. 2003) .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Nematomorpha

Class

Gordioida

Order

Gordioidea

Family

Chordodidae

Genus

Neochordodes

Loc

Neochordodes occidentalis ( Montgomery, 1898 )

Schmidt-Rhaesa, Andreas & Menzel, Lena 2005
2005
Loc

Pseudochordodes occidentalis: de Miralles and de Villalobos 1993: 108

de Miralles DAB & de Villalobos LC 1993: 108
1993
Loc

Neochordodes occidentalis: Poinar and Doelman 1974: 328–330

Poinar GO & Doelman JJ 1974: 330
1974
Loc

Chordodes occidentalis

Montgomery TH 1898: 52
1898
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