Severianoia annamensis Van Luc and Spiridonov, 1993

Carreno, Ramon A., 2017, New species of Hammerschmidtiella Chitwood, 1932, and Blattophila Cobb, 1920, and new geographical records for Severianoia annamensis Van Luc & Spiridonov, 1993 (Nematoda: Oxyurida: Thelastomatoidea) from Cockroaches (Insecta: Blattaria) in Ohio and Florida, U. S. A., Zootaxa 4226 (3), pp. 429-441 : 438-439

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4226.3.6

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:77877607-ECE7-455E-A76C-353B16F92296

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5631725

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F81587BE-FFC4-FF8E-16BA-CC7C24D377B3

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Severianoia annamensis Van Luc and Spiridonov, 1993
status

 

Severianoia annamensis Van Luc and Spiridonov, 1993

( Table 3 View TABLE 3 )

Several specimens of P. surinamensis collected in southern Florida were infected with S. annamensis ( Table 3 View TABLE 3 ).

Taxonomic Summary

Host: Pycnoscelus surinamensis (Linnaeus, 1758)

Locality: John Pennecamp Coral Reef State Park, Key Largo, Florida (25 ̊7’38.3”N, 80 ̊24’31.2”W).

Prevalence = 15%; mean intensity = 2.8

Site of infection: hindgut

Specimens deposited: Vouchers HWML 99923 1 male, 1 female; HWML 99924 View Materials , three females, John Pennecamp Coral Reef State Park, Key Largo , Florida.

Voucher DNA sequence: 18S small subunit ribosomal RNA gene, partial sequence Genbank accession number KX752431 View Materials .

General observations of S. annamensis from Florida . Although esophageal proportions are slightly larger (with overlap) in the Florida specimens (415–503 µm in Florida specimens vs. 320–460 µm in original description), other measurements overlapped more broadly with those provided for S. annamensis , and the specimens were determined to be morphologically indistinguishable. The type species, Severianoia severianoi ( Schwenck, 1926) Travassos, 1929 has much larger esophageal length (525–706 µm in original description by Schwenck and redescription by Kloss, 1966). Female body length (3000–4366 µm) is also greater in S. severianoi . A report of a single female originally identified by Chitwood (1932) as S. severianoi from P. surinamensis in southern Florida (Paradise Key, Everglades National Park) included measurements that are more consistent with S. annamensis ( Van Luc & Spiridonov, 1993) . The tail length of Chitwood’s female (110 µm) fell well out of the range of the Key Largo specimens (141–159 µm). However, tail length in the original description of S. severianoi (100–200 µm) overlaps with both species ( Schwenck, 1926; Van Luc and Spiridonov, 1993), and re-measurement of Chitwood’s specimen ( US National Parasite Collection code USNPC 31893 View Materials ) yielded a tail length of 147 µm. The Severianoia sp. documented from the Galápagos Islands also yielded overlapping measurements of both males and females of S. annamensis and more closely resembles S. annamensis than S. severianoi ( Sinnott et al., 2015) .

TABLE 3. Morphometric measurements (in micrometers) for Severianoia annamensis Van Luc and Spiridonov, 1993. The mean and standard deviation are followed by range.

Character Females (n = 6) Males (n = 5)
Body length 3302 ± 383 (2750 – 3875) 735 ± 100 (600 – 840)
Maximum width 272 ± 21 (250 – 305) 94 ± 17 (75 – 110)
Buccal cavity (length) 15 ± 3 (13 – 21) 6 ± 1 (5 – 8)
Oral annule length 6 ± 2 (5 – 9) -
Oral annule width 24 ± 2 (21 – 26) -
Second annule length 17 ± 2 (15 – 18) -
Second annule width 48 ± 2 (47 – 51) -
Nerve ring 173 ± 12 (162 – 190) 101 ± 2 (100 – 103)
Excretory pore Not observed 300
Esophagus 450 ± 29 (415 – 503) 160 ± 19 (139 – 182)
Corpus length 306 ± 17 (288 – 338) 92 ± 13 (79 – 109)
Corpus maximum width 56 ± 3 (53 – 60) 17 ± 2 (14 – 19)
Isthmus length 25 ± 5 (18 – 30) 25 ± 2 (23 – 28)
Bulb length 117 ± 8 (110 – 130) 45 ± 6 (38 – 50)
Bulb width 123 ± 7 (113 – 132) 36 ± 4 (30 – 41)
Vulva from anterior end 2265 ± 50 (2230 – 2300) -
Vulva from posterior end 1191 ± 543 (808 – 1575) -
Vagina length 115 -
Tail length 152 ± 8 (141 – 159) 50 ± 1 (48 – 51)
Egg length 80 ± 4 (74 – 83) -
Egg width 30 ± 2 (27 – 31) -
a 12 ± 2 (10 – 15) 8 (7 – 8)
b 7 ± 1 (6 – 9) 5 ± 1 (4 – 6)
c 23 ± 3 (19 – 28) 15 ± 2 (12 – 17)
V 66 ± 10 (59 – 73) -
Spicule length - 28 ± 4 (23 – 33)
HWML

Howard W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology

USNPC

United States National Parasite Collection

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