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1.
Syst Parasitol ; 94(6): 689-698, 2017 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28573548

RESUMO

Tripaphylus musteli (van Beneden, 1851) (Copepoda, Siphonostomatoida, Sphyriidae) is redescribed from an adult female collected from the branchial chamber of a starry smooth-hound, Mustelus asterias Cloquet (Carcharhiniformes, Triakidae), captured in the English Channel off Portland, UK. The new account of T. musteli is the first based on a complete adult female and highlighted the lack of a robust distinction separating Tripaphylus Richiardi, in Anonymous, 1878 and Paeon Wilson, 1919 prompting us to relegate Paeon to a junior subjective synonym of Tripaphylus. In the light of this synonymy the eight former species of Paeon are transferred to Tripaphylus as follows: T. ferox (Wilson, 1919) new combination, T. elongatus (Wilson, 1932) new combination, T. vassierei (Delamare Deboutteville & Nuñes-Ruivo, 1954) new combination, T. lobatus (Kirtisinghe, 1964) new combination, T. asymboli (Turner, Kyne & Bennett, 2003) new combination, T. versicolor (Wilson, 1919) new combination, T. australis (Kabata, 1993) new combination, and T. triakis (Castro Romero, 2001) new combination. Comparisons between terminology used in this report and that in the literature indicate that all transformed adult females of Tripaphylus probably possess a full complement of cephalic appendages and maxillipeds. All limbs, with the exception of the maxillae share a general morphological similarity to the corresponding appendages of conspecific males. The maxilla of the transformed adult female of Tripaphylus is a small digitiform protuberance associated with a swelling in some species.


Assuntos
Copépodes/classificação , Elasmobrânquios/parasitologia , Animais , Copépodes/anatomia & histologia , Feminino , Masculino , Especificidade da Espécie , Reino Unido
2.
Zootaxa ; 4174(1): 69-92, 2016 Oct 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27811788

RESUMO

Birth deposits most future scientists within a standard deviation or so of average, with life proceeding with its typical bumps and ruts. For a few, however, life begins as or soon transpires into a Homeric challenge. Those who emerge from such beginnings to widely contribute to humanity become mankind's cherished dignitaries... exemplars promulgating the legitimacy of hope and lending encouragement for progress. Zbigniew Kabata, an outstanding parasitologist and copepodologist who died at age 90 on the 4th of July 2014 in Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada was such a giant.


Assuntos
Biodiversidade , Copépodes/classificação , Copépodes/fisiologia , Parasitologia/história , Simbiose , Zoologia/história , Animais , Colúmbia Britânica , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Invertebrados/parasitologia , Polônia , Escócia , Vertebrados/parasitologia
3.
J Parasitol ; 102(2): 179-86, 2016 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26800278

RESUMO

A new marine leech is herein described from specimens infecting the external surfaces, including the mouth and cloaca, of the banded guitarfish, Zapteryx exasperate, captured in the Gulf of California and eastern Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Diego, California. The leech is assigned to Austrobdella by possessing continuous contractile coelomic channels that lie outside the somatic musculature along the lateral edges of the urosome (marginal lacunae), clitellar gland cells densely packed in the urosome, 5 pairs of testisacs, and 6-annulate mid-body somites. The new leech is distinguished from its 6 congeners on the basis of body size (maximum 10 mm long) and shape (sub-cylindrical trachelosome distinctly demarcated from wider urosome that is ventrally flattened, convex dorsally, and narrowing toward caudal sucker that is narrow, 20-25% of maximum body width), number of eyespots (2 pairs), shape and arrangement of the ovisacs (pyriform and limited to somites XII/XIII), and characteristics of the midgut (1 pair of mycetomes, 6 pairs of simple thin-walled crop ceca, ventral postceca wanting, and 2 pairs of dendritic diverticula emerging from anterior portion of thick-walled intestine). The new species occurs in the northeastern Pacific Ocean on a benthic elasmobranch. Examination of host specificity for each Austrobdella species using the quantitative Index of Phylogenetic Host Specificity revealed that the new species is 1 of 4 oioxenous specialists in the genus, and the remaining 3 congeners are relative generalists herein classified as euryxenous. This is the first time host specificity for members of the Piscicolidae has been quantitatively assessed. The analysis suggests that associations between marine leeches belonging in Austrobdella and their vertebrate hosts are driven by ecological influences rather than host taxonomic placement.


Assuntos
Ectoparasitoses/veterinária , Doenças dos Peixes/parasitologia , Sanguessugas/fisiologia , Rajidae/parasitologia , Animais , California , Cloaca/parasitologia , Ectoparasitoses/parasitologia , Feminino , Especificidade de Hospedeiro , Sanguessugas/anatomia & histologia , Masculino , Boca/parasitologia , Oceano Pacífico
5.
Syst Parasitol ; 87(1): 33-45, 2014 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24395574

RESUMO

A new tongue worm (Pentastomida) belonging to the Sebekidae Sambon, 1922 (Porocephaloidea Sambon, 1922) is described based on exemplars collected from softshell terrapins Apalone spinifera aspera (Agassiz) and Apalone ferox (Schneider) in the southeastern United States; a new genus is erected to accommodate the new species. The new species belongs in the Sebekidae because adults possess four simple hooks arranged in a trapezoid pattern on the ventral surface of the cephalothorax, a mouth opening between the anterior and posterior pairs of hooks, a terminal anus, an elongated uterus with preanal uterine pore, and a Y-shaped seminal vesicle. Nymphs possess geminate hooks, and the new species has an aquatic life-cycle in which nymphs become encapsulated in the body cavity of a freshwater fish and mature in the lungs of a terrapin. The new genus is distinct from other genera in the Sebekidae primarily by differences in hook morphology and the fact that representatives use a terrapin as a definitive host. Nymphs infecting fish and presumed to be the new species matured as postlarval juveniles conspecific with the new species when they were fed to the eastern mud turtle, Kinosternon subrubrum (Lacépède). Nymphs of the new species are anatomically similar to but larger than nymphs of Sebekia mississippiensis Overstreet, Self & Vliet, 1985 found in the mesentery of fishes captured in Florida, U.S.A. Adults of the new species differ from those of S. mississippiensis based on hook features, chloride cell pore pattern on annuli, body size, and use of a turtle rather than crocodilian definitive host. The new species is the third North American member of the Sebekidae.


Assuntos
Pentastomídeos/classificação , Pentastomídeos/ultraestrutura , Animais , Feminino , Peixes/parasitologia , Estágios do Ciclo de Vida , Masculino , Sudeste dos Estados Unidos , Especificidade da Espécie , Tartarugas
6.
J Parasitol ; 99(6): 1151-4, 2013 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23795704

RESUMO

Fifty lemon sharks, Negaprion brevirostris , were captured in a shallow, mangrove-fringed shark nursery at Bimini, Bahamas and examined for the presence of skin-dwelling ectoparasitic monogenoids (Monogenoidea). Sixteen sharks were infected by Dermophthirius nigrellii (Microbothriidae); the youngest host was estimated to be 3- to 4-wk-old. Infection prevalence, mean intensity, and median intensity (0.32, 2.63, and 2.0, respectively, for all sharks) were not significantly different between neonates (estimated ages 3- to 10-wk-old) and non-neonatal juveniles (estimated ages 1- to 4-yr-old), suggesting that soon after parturition lemon sharks acquire infection levels of D. nigrellii matching those of juvenile conspecifics. Monogenoids were only found on the trailing portion of the first and second dorsal fins and upper lobe of the caudal fin. The prevalence of D. nigrellii was highest on the first dorsal fin; however, the mean and median intensities of D. nigrellii were similar between fins in all but 1 case. These results raise important husbandry implications regarding the practice of preferentially seeking neonatal and other small lemon sharks for captivity.


Assuntos
Ectoparasitoses/veterinária , Doenças dos Peixes/parasitologia , Platelmintos/fisiologia , Tubarões/parasitologia , Infecções por Trematódeos/veterinária , Fatores Etários , Nadadeiras de Animais/parasitologia , Animais , Animais de Zoológico , Ectoparasitoses/epidemiologia , Ectoparasitoses/parasitologia , Doenças dos Peixes/epidemiologia , Platelmintos/classificação , Prevalência , Infecções por Trematódeos/epidemiologia , Infecções por Trematódeos/parasitologia
7.
J Parasitol ; 98(2): 333-40, 2012 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22032442

RESUMO

Eggs of Huffmanela cf. carcharhini from the skin of an aquarium-held, juvenile sandbar shark, Carcharhinus plumbeus , from the Pacific Ocean were studied using light and scanning electron microscopy. Grossly, eggs imparted a scribble-like skin marking approximately 130 × 60 mm on the right side of the shark's snout adjacent to its eye and nostril. Fresh (unfixed) eggs were elliptical, 75-95 µm long (x¯  =  85 µm, SD  =  ±4.5; n  =  75), 48-63 µm wide (53 ± 3.4; 75), 8-10 µm in shell thickness (9 ± 1.3; 27), 45-68 µm in vitelline mass length (52 ± 6.9; 8); had a smooth shell surface and nonprotruding polar plugs 8-13 µm wide (10 ± 1.5; 73); lacked thin filaments, superficial envelope, and shell spines; sank in 35 ppt artificial seawater; and did not spontaneously hatch after 12 hr in 35 ppt artificial seawater. Formalin-fixed eggs measured 193 days postfixation were 75-95 µm long (84 ± 3.9; 150), 45-60 µm wide (50 ± 2.2; 150), 5-10 µm in shell thickness (8 ± 1.2; 87), 45-60 µm in vitelline mass length (51 ± 3.0; 92), and 30-40 µm in vitelline mass width (33 ± 2.0; 84), and had nonprotruding polar plugs that were 10-15 µm long (11 ± 1.4; 93) and 8-10 µm wide (9 ± 1.1; 108). Forcibly hatched first-stage larvae (unfixed) were filiform, 188-273 µm long (212 ± 25.5; 13), 8-13 µm wide (10 ± 1.2; 13), and had fine transverse striations. Eggs infected the epidermis only. Histology revealed intra-epithelial inflammation with eosinophilic granulocytes and hyperplasia, plus dermal lymphofollicular hyperplasia associated with the infection. The eggs of H. cf. carcharhini likely undergo considerable ex utero development before being sloughed (unhatched) from the host, along with epidermal cells.


Assuntos
Doenças dos Peixes/parasitologia , Nematoides/classificação , Infecções por Nematoides/veterinária , Tubarões/parasitologia , Pele/parasitologia , Animais , Feminino , Microscopia Eletrônica de Varredura/veterinária , Nematoides/isolamento & purificação , Nematoides/ultraestrutura , Infecções por Nematoides/parasitologia , Nariz , Óvulo/ultraestrutura
8.
Parasitol Int ; 60(4): 447-51, 2011 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21840416

RESUMO

Infrapopulation genetic variation of the oioxenous, hermaphroditic flatworm Nasicola klawei (Monogenea: Capsalidae) infecting the nasal cavities of nine yellowfin tuna, Thunnus albacares, from the Gulf of Mexico was analyzed using the first internal transcribed spacer (ITS1) single strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP), ITS1 sequencing, and amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP). Of a total of 32 worms, six had unique ITS1-SSCP types and the rest was grouped by three types. Two worms of the same infrapopulation shared an ITS1-SSCP type in nine instances but no infrapopulation was monophyletic by ITS1-SSCP analysis. ITS1 sequences (420 bp) varied by 1-11 (0.2-2.6%) nucleotides. Twenty-three AFLP profiles of 80-110 bands failed to support genomic monophyly of any N. klawei infrapopulation. 28S rDNA (990 bp) sequences from four worms representing four infrapopulations were identical and matched conspecific GenBank sequences. Concordant ITS1-SSCP and AFLP analyses indicated that these N. klawei infrapopulations principally resulted from tuna being repeatedly colonized by planktonic, infective larvae (oncomiracidia) rather than by a single host colonization followed by parasite maturation, self-fertilization, and production of auto-infecting progeny.


Assuntos
DNA Espaçador Ribossômico/genética , Doenças dos Peixes/parasitologia , Cavidade Nasal/parasitologia , Polimorfismo Conformacional de Fita Simples/genética , Trematódeos/genética , Atum/parasitologia , Análise do Polimorfismo de Comprimento de Fragmentos Amplificados , Animais , Impressões Digitais de DNA , DNA Ribossômico/genética , Bases de Dados Genéticas , Golfo do México , México , Filogenia , Autofertilização/fisiologia , Trematódeos/classificação , Trematódeos/isolamento & purificação
9.
J Parasitol ; 96(5): 887-96, 2010 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20950094

RESUMO

The infection pattern of Kroeyerina elongata (Kroyeriidae, Copepoda) in the olfactory sacs of the blue shark, Prionace glauca, was investigated using 4,722 copepods from 54 olfactory sacs. Copepod prevalence and mean intensity of infection per olfactory sac were 94.0 and 91.1%, respectively, and the most intensely infected olfactory sac and shark hosted 218 and 409 copepods, respectively. There were significant linear relationships between the number of female and total copepods per left olfactory sac and shark fork length as well as between the numbers of female, male, and total copepods per shark and mean olfactory sac width and cumulative olfactory sac width. Female copepods typically outnumbered males within olfactory sacs (mean intensity  =  65.7 and 26.3, respectively), and no statistical differences were detected between the numbers of copepods inhabiting the left and right olfactory sacs. Copepods were not evenly distributed within olfactory sacs. Typically, female copepods occupied olfactory chambers located centrally along the length of the olfactory sac, while males infected lateral olfactory chambers nearest the naris. The orientation of most copepods (84.6%) suggested positive rheotaxis relative to the path of water through the olfactory sac. Within olfactory chambers, most mature females (68.2%) infected the first third of the peripheral excurrent channel and the adjacent fringe of olfactory lamellae, while most males (91.7%) infected the olfactory lamellae, and the 4 larval females collected were attached within the lamellar field and grasped by males. Based on the observed infection patterns and the pattern of water flow throughout the olfactory sac, a hypothesis regarding the life cycle of K. elongata is advanced wherein infective copepodids are swept into the olfactory sac from the surrounding sea and initially colonize the olfactory lamellae. Copepodids feed and mature among the olfactory lamellae, and adult males search for mates and copulate with young females among the olfactory lamellae. Inseminated females move to the peripheral excurrent channels to mature and produce ovisacs. Hatching ovisacs release free-swimming nauplii into the excurrent water flow to be swept into the milieu, where they can molt into infective copepodids that may infect new hosts.


Assuntos
Copépodes/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Doenças dos Peixes/parasitologia , Mucosa Olfatória/parasitologia , Tubarões/parasitologia , Análise de Variância , Animais , Feminino , Masculino , Mucosa Olfatória/anatomia & histologia , Razão de Masculinidade
10.
J Parasitol ; 93(1): 32-8, 2007 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17436939

RESUMO

Janinecaira darkthread n. gen., n. sp. (Eudactylinidae, Siphonostomatoida, Copepoda) infects gills of the ornate eagle ray Aetomylaeus vespertilio (Bleeker, 1852) (Myliobatidae, Myliobatiformes) in the Beagle Gulf (Timor Sea, eastern Indian Ocean) off northern Australia. The adult female of Janinecaira darkthread n. sp. is most easily distinguished from other eudactylinids (Eudactylinidae) by its long genital complex that comprises about 86-90% of the total body length. A diagnostic key to genera of Eudactylinidae based on adult females is provided.


Assuntos
Copépodes/classificação , Ectoparasitoses/veterinária , Doenças dos Peixes/parasitologia , Brânquias/parasitologia , Rajidae/parasitologia , Animais , Copépodes/anatomia & histologia , Copépodes/ultraestrutura , Ectoparasitoses/parasitologia , Feminino , Oceano Índico , Microscopia Eletrônica de Varredura/veterinária
11.
J Parasitol ; 92(6): 1207-10, 2006 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17304796

RESUMO

Greeniedeets buccaneer n. gen., n. sp. (Hyponeoidae, Siphonostomatoida, Copepoda) infects the olfactory sac of a gulper shark, Centrophorus sp. (Centrophoridae, Squaliformes) off Madagascar. The adult female of Greeniedeets buccaneer n. gen., n. sp. is most easily distinguished from other hyponeoids (Hyponeoidae) by its possession of a genital complex that is horseshoe shaped in dorsal view. An amended family diagnosis for Hyponeoidae and diagnostic key to hyponeoids based on adult females are provided.


Assuntos
Copépodes/classificação , Doenças dos Peixes/parasitologia , Doenças Parasitárias em Animais/parasitologia , Tubarões/parasitologia , Animais , Copépodes/anatomia & histologia , Feminino , Madagáscar , Cavidade Nasal/parasitologia
12.
J Parasitol ; 91(6): 1512-1513, 2005 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29608402
13.
J Parasitol ; 90(3): 481-4, 2004 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15270089

RESUMO

Schistobrachia jordaanae n. sp. (Copepoda: Siphonostomatoida: Lernaeopodidae) is described from adult female specimens collected from gill filaments of a diamond ray Gymnura natalensis (Gilchrist and Thompson, 1911) captured in the Indian Ocean off the South African coast. Schistobrachia jordaanae is best distinguished from its congeners by 2 unique characteristics: it possesses a necklike region between the origin of its maxillae and maxillipeds and the tips of its maxillae bifurcate repeatedly to form a rootlike anchor.


Assuntos
Copépodes/classificação , Doenças dos Peixes/parasitologia , Brânquias/parasitologia , Rajidae/parasitologia , Animais , Copépodes/anatomia & histologia , Feminino , Oceano Índico
14.
J Parasitol ; 88(3): 474-81, 2002 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12099414

RESUMO

Twenty eyes from 10 Pacific sleeper sharks Somniosus pacificus, infected with the copepod Ommatokoita elongata, were collected in Prince William Sound, Alaska, and the eyes of an additional 18 S. pacificus captured in the same area were inspected for copepods. Prevalence of infection by adult female O. elongata was 97% (n = 28); mean intensity of infection was 1.89 (+/-1SD = 0.32) adult female copepods per infected shark and 1.0 (+/- 1SD = 0.0) adult female copepods per infected eye. Five of the 20 collected eyes were infected by O. elongata chalimi, and 9 of 20 eyes had 1 to several remnants of bullae embedded in the cornea. Bullae were each associated with a corneal opacity, and anchoring plugs of chalimi were associated with pinpoint lesions in the cornea or conjunctiva. All eyes exhibited marked edema and erosion of the bulbar conjunctiva, and this torus-shaped lesion corresponded to each O. elongata adult female's presumed feeding and abrasion radius. Histological examinations revealed lesions in the anterior segment of eyes to be generally similar, but graded, in severity, and in all eyes they involved the conjunctiva, cornea, filtration angle, and iris. Epithelial lesions were characterized by corneal ulceration, dysplasia, hyperplasia, and heterophilic keratitis, and by ulcerative conjunctivitis accompanied by epithelial hyperplasia with rete peg formation. Disorganization of fibers, necrosis, mineralization, minimal heterophilic influx, and perilimbic neovascularization were associated with bullae in the corneal stroma. Within the limbus there was diffuse histiocytic and lymphocytic inflammation and marked lymphofollicular hyperplasia. Heterophilic and mononuclear anterior uveitis affecting the filtration angle and anterior surface of the iris was also observed in most eyes. One eye had a partial transcorneal prolapse of a ruptured lens, with degenerative changes in the ruptured lens and severe keratitis associated with the anchoring devices of an adult copepod and several chalimi. Fourteen eyes exhibited 1 to several, randomly distributed, small, round to irregular, corneal opacities or pits that were not associated with copepods, and it is likely that these opacities represented lesions associated with adult female or larval anchoring devices from past infections. The avascular cornea represents a niche that is somewhat shielded from host immune reactions, and this, and the fact that the general body surface of sleeper sharks is covered by tall and sharp placoid scales, may partially explain the corneal attachment of O. elongata adult females. It was concluded that O. elongata infections can lead to severe vision impairment in Pacific sleeper sharks but that these infections do not significantly debilitate hosts because they probably do not need to rely on acute vision for their survival.


Assuntos
Doenças da Córnea/veterinária , Crustáceos/ultraestrutura , Infecções Oculares Parasitárias/veterinária , Tubarões/parasitologia , Alaska , Animais , Doenças da Córnea/parasitologia , Doenças da Córnea/patologia , Infecções Oculares Parasitárias/parasitologia , Feminino , Masculino , Microscopia Eletrônica de Varredura , Dermatopatias Parasitárias/parasitologia , Dermatopatias Parasitárias/patologia , Dermatopatias Parasitárias/veterinária
15.
J Parasitol ; 88(1): 19-26, 2002 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12053965

RESUMO

Early- and middle-stage copepodids of Anthosoma crassum (Dichelesthiidae: Siphonostomatoida) and lesions associated with A. crassum infections are described from samples collected from the jaws of shortfin makos captured off southern California. The copepodids did not possess frontal filaments or frontal organs, and they resided in a headstandlike position firmly attached by their embedded antennae. Copepod larvae and small adults were lodged in shallow mucosal ulcers that basally exhibited mild, acute granulocytic stomatitis; large adults were lodged in deep tunnels encompassing the anterior aspects of their bodies. Some lesions contained more than I copepod. Examinations of lesions revealed that A. crassum infection of shortfin makos can result in severe subacute, necrotizing stomatitis with hemorrhage, granulation tissue, and lymphocytic aggregations in the mucosa, and reactive lymphocytic infiltration of the submucosal skeletal muscle. Copepod gut contents consisted of shark erythrocytes, hemosiderin granules, and necrotic host cells. These observations, along with reports of sharks heavily infected with A. crassum, suggest that this copepod may sometimes play a role in the morbidity and mortality of sharks that it infects.


Assuntos
Crustáceos/anatomia & histologia , Crustáceos/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Ectoparasitoses/veterinária , Doenças dos Peixes/parasitologia , Tubarões/parasitologia , Animais , Feminino , Doenças dos Peixes/patologia , Arcada Osseodentária/parasitologia , Arcada Osseodentária/patologia , Masculino
16.
J Parasitol ; 88(1): 28-35, 2002 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12053975

RESUMO

Taeniacanthodes dojirii n. sp. (Copepoda: Poecilostomatoida: Taeniacanthidae) is described from adult female specimens collected from the body surface of Cortez electric rays Narcine entemedor (Torpediniformes, Narcinidae), captured at several locations in the Gulf of California. Taeniacanthodes dojirii is distinguished from its congeners, as well as from other members of Taeniacanthidae, by possessing unimerous fifth legs. A cladistic analysis of the 3 known species of Taeniacanthodes resulted in a single most parsimonious tree (tree length = 18 steps, consistency index = 1) demonstrating that T. gracilis and T. haakeri, both parasites of benthic teleosts, are more closely related to each other than to the new species.


Assuntos
Crustáceos/classificação , Ectoparasitoses/veterinária , Doenças dos Peixes/parasitologia , Filogenia , Torpedo/parasitologia , Animais , Crustáceos/anatomia & histologia , Crustáceos/genética , Feminino , Masculino , México
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