Kapsulotaenia pythonis ( Wahid, 1968 ) de Chambrier, Brabec, Tran & Scholz, 2019

Chambrier, Alain De, Brabec, Jan & Scholz, Tomáš, 2020, Molecular data reveal unexpected species diversity of tapeworms of Australasian reptiles: revision of Kapsulotaenia (Cestoda: Proteocephalidae), Zootaxa 4869 (4), pp. 529-561 : 536-538

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4869.4.4

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B88FBB1F-1083-472E-B429-1403BB080E07

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4562536

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FE4287AB-FF9C-3C09-FF2C-FB46FEEEAE54

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Plazi

scientific name

Kapsulotaenia pythonis ( Wahid, 1968 ) de Chambrier, Brabec, Tran & Scholz, 2019
status

 

4. Kapsulotaenia pythonis ( Wahid, 1968) de Chambrier, Brabec, Tran & Scholz, 2019

( Figs. 3B, E, F View FIGURE 3 , 10A View FIGURE 10 )

Syn. Acanthotaenia pythonis Wahid, 1968

Type and only known host. Green python, Morelia viridis (Schlegel, 1872) ( Squamata : Pythonidae ).

Site of infection. Intestine.

Type locality. London Zoological Garden.

Additional localities. Papua-New Guinea (new geographical record).

Type material. Syntypes—3 slides with fragments of at least 2 specimens (2 scoleces) and 7 slides with cross sections of the strobila and frontal sections of the scolex (MHNG-PLAT-99946; NHMUK 1998.10.12.18–22) .

Material studied. Syntypes; 3 slides with 1 specimen without scolex and frontal sections of gravid proglottids from M. viridis, Papua-New Guinea, provided by A. A. Rego (MHNG-PLAT-34804) .

Morphological description (see Table 2 View TABLE 2 for new measurements). Strobila relatively long (135–150 mm). Mature proglottids wider than long; gravid proglottids longer than wide. Tegument thick, covered with minute spinitriches throughout strobila. Scolex wider than neck. Apical organ surrounded by several rows of circular muscle fibres. Retractor muscles connecting rostellum with neck region present. Genital primordia appear about 0.9 mm posterior to scolex. Testes oblong, in one or two layers and two fields converging anteriorly. Vas deferens convoluted, in median posterior field. Cirrus-sac pear-shaped; cirrus short, armed with small spines (spinitriches). Ovary bilobed. Terminal part of vagina near genital pore surrounded by small vaginal sphincter, opening posterior or anterior to cirrus-sac. Genital pore irregularly alternating, postequatorial. Vitelline follicles in two lateral bands occupying most of proglottid length, interrupted at level of cirrus-sac on ventral side. Uterus reaching almost anterior margin of proglottid, posteriorly not overpassing ovarian isthmus. Eggs in clusters.

Remarks. This species was described by Wahid (1968) as Acanthotaenia pythonis from the green python, Morelia viridis , kept in the Zoological Garden of London. The original description was not very detailed and illustrations were rather schematic. Based on the presence of eggs in clusters, de Chambrier et al. (2019) transferred the species to Kapsulotaenia .

A study of type specimens and new material of K. pythonis from the type host from Papua-New Guinea (new geographical record and probably the original distribution area of this species) has revealed, among others, the presence of concentric circles of muscle fibres in the apex of the scolex ( Fig. 3B View FIGURE 3 ), a thick-walled cirrus-sac, an armed cirrus ( Fig. 3F View FIGURE 3 ), and eggs grouped in oval clusters of 19– 22 eggs each ( Fig. 10A View FIGURE 10 ). The vagina opens anterior (68%— Fig. 3E View FIGURE 3 ) or posterior (32%— Fig. 3F View FIGURE 3 ) to the cirrus-sac (n = 98) .

The presence of concentric circles of muscle fibres in the apex of the scolex and a thick-walled cirrus-sac are features lacking in other members of Kapsulotaenia . Awaiting collection of new material of this species for DNA studies, this species provisionally remains in Kapsulotaenia .

Wolf et al. (2014) and Hallinger et al. (2020) observed the presence of Kapsulotaenia spp. in faeces of the green python, M. viridis . Figures 3b View FIGURE 3 1 View FIGURE 1 , 2 View FIGURE 2 ( Wolf et al. 2014) and Fig. 1a View FIGURE 1 ( Hallinger et al. 2020) show a cluster of eggs in M. viridis that seems to belong to K. pythonis . Hallinger et al. (2020) also reported eggs, presumably belonging to Kapsulotaenia tapeworms, from Boa constrictor Linnaeus, 1758 and Bitis schneideri (Boettger, 1886) kept in German zoological gardens. However, these records need verification as they most probably represented accidental infections (except for K. pythonis in M. viridis , species of Kapsulotaenia are specific parasites of monitor lizards). Another proteocephalid tapeworm, Crepidobothrium gerrardii (Baird, 1860) , is a common parasite of B. constrictor , whereas no Kapsulotaenia tapeworms have been found in this host ( Rego 1967; de Chambrier 1989a, b; Gomez-Puerta 2011).

NHMUK

Natural History Museum, London

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