RESUMO
An extensive parasitological study of 365 freshwater exotic fish specimens belonging to 13 species of seven families (Cichlidae, Cyprinidae, Osphronemidae, Pangasidae, Poeciliidae, Characidae, and Loricariidae) collected from 31 Aquaculture Production Units (APU) from Central Mexico revealed the occurrence of 29 ecto- and endo-parasitic monogeneans found on gills and stomachs: Cichlidogyrussclerosus, C.thurstonae, C.tilapiae, Cichlidogyrus sp. 1, Cichlidogyrus sp. 2, Enterogyruscoronatus, E.malmbergi, Gusseviaspiralocirra, Sciadicleithrumiphthimum, Sciadicleithrum sp., Scutogyruslongicornis (all Dactylogyridae), Gyrodactyluscichlidarum, and G.yacatli (Gyrodactylidae) on Oreochromisniloticus, Pterophyllumscalare and Hemichromis sp. (Cichlidae); Dactylogyrusbaueri, D.formosus, D.intermedius, D.vastator, D.extensus, Dactylogyrus sp. (all Dactylogyridae), and G.kobayashii on Carassiusauratus, Cyprinuscarpio and Ctenopharyngodonidella (Cyprinidae); Trianchoratusacleithrium and T.trichogasterium (Dactylogyridae) on Trichogastertrichopterus (Osphronemidae); Thaparocleiduscaecus, T.siamensis (Dactylogyridae), and Dactylogyridae sp. on Pangasianodonhypophthalmus (Pangasidae); G.poeciliae on Poeciliareticulata (Poeciliidae); Diaphorocleidusarmillatus (Dactylogyridae) on Gymnocorymbusternetzy (Characidae); Unilatusunilatus (Dactylogyridae) and Gyrodactylidae sp. on Hypostomus sp. (Loricariidae). The paramount importance of the establishment of these monogeneans due to the importation/exportation of non-native ornamental and other exotic host fish species cultured for food in Mexico is briefly discussed. Quarantine is recommended for all transferred host species.
RESUMO
Aristocleidus mexicanus n. sp. and Aristocleidus lacantuni n. sp. are described from the gills of the Mexican mojarra Eugerres mexicanus (Gerreidae, Perciformes) from the Rio Lacantún basin, Chiapas State, Mexico. These new species differ from previously described congeneric species in the characteristics of several structures, including: (a) ventral anchors, with differences in length (i.e. 46-50 µm in A. mexicanus vs. 38-43 µm, 34-37 µm, and 26-33 µm in Aristocleidus hastatus Mueller, 1936, Aristocleidus sp. of Mendoza-Franco, Violante-González & Roche 2009, and Aristocleidus lamothei Kritsky & Mendoza-Franco, 2008, respectively) and shape (i.e. slightly angular union of elongate arcing shaft and point in A. mexicanus vs. point and shaft united at a conspicuous angular bend in A. hastatus and Aristocleidus sp., and evenly curved shaft and point in A. lamothei); (b) male copulatory organ, i.e. a coiled tube with less than one ring in A. mexicanus and A. lacantuni (vs. a coiled tube of about 1½ in Aristocleidus sp.); (c) distal end of the accessory piece (ornate in A. mexicanus vs. distally flattened and trifid in A. hastatus and A. lamothei, respectively); (d) vaginal tube (moderately long in A. mexicanus vs. short in A. lamothei and looping in Aristocleidus sp.); and (e) ventral bar (anteromedial process with terminal horn-like ornamentation in A. lacantuni vs. ornamentation absent in the other species). This study reports for the first time species of Aristocleidus from freshwater environments in Mexico.