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1.
Parasitology ; 151(7): 637-649, 2024 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38682282

RESUMEN

A total of 32 taxa of helminths were recovered from 52 individuals corresponding to 17 species of didelphiomorph marsupials collected across Bolivia. From these, 20 taxa are registered for the first time in this landlocked South American country, including the cestode Mathevotaenia bivittata, and the nematodes Moennigia sp., Travassostrongylus callis, Viannaia didelphis, V. hamata, V. metachirops, V. minispicula, V. philanderi, V. simplicispicula, V. skrjabini, V. viannai, Cruzia tentaculata, Monodelphoxyuris dollmeiri, Neohilgertia venusti, Pterygodermatites elegans, Pterygodermatites jeagerskioldi, Spirura guianensis, Gongylonemoides marsupialis, Turgida turgida and Trichuris reesali. We report for the first time parasites for Marmosops bishopi, Monodelphis emiliae, Monodeplhis glirina, Monodelphis sanctarosae, Monodelphis peruviana and Thylamys sponsorius and document 38 new records of parasites infecting marsupials. Twenty-six taxa of helminths infect 2 or more species of didelphiomorph marsupials, with the exception of Travassostrongylus callis, Viannaia didelphis, V. hamata, V. minispicula and V. hamate, which infected individuals of a single species.


Asunto(s)
Helmintiasis Animal , Helmintos , Animales , Bolivia/epidemiología , Helmintiasis Animal/parasitología , Helmintiasis Animal/epidemiología , Helmintos/clasificación , Helmintos/aislamiento & purificación , Zarigüeyas/parasitología , Masculino , Femenino , Parasitosis Intestinales/veterinaria , Parasitosis Intestinales/parasitología , Parasitosis Intestinales/epidemiología , Prevalencia
2.
Parasitology ; 150(8): 723-733, 2023 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37157058

RESUMEN

Parasites are key components of the biosphere not only due to their huge diversity, but also because they exert important influences on ecological processes. Nevertheless, we lack an understanding of the biogeographical patterns of parasite diversity. Here, we tap into the potential of biodiversity collections for understanding parasite biogeography. We assess species richness of supracommunities of helminth parasites infecting mammal assemblages in the Nearctic, and describe its relation to latitude, climate, host diversity, and land area. We compiled data from parasitology collections and assessed parasite diversity in Nearctic ecoregions for the entire parasite supracommunity of mammals in each ecoregion, as well as separately from carnivores and rodents to explore the effect of host taxonomic resolution on observed patterns. For carnivores, we found evidence of a negative latitudinal gradient, while parasites of rodents displayed no clear pattern. We found that parasite diversity was positively correlated with mean annual temperature and negatively correlated with seasonal precipitation. Parasite richness shows a diversity peak at intermediate host richness values and in carnivores correlates with temperature and seasonal precipitation. Rodent parasite diversity did not correlate with explored factors. Other researchers are encouraged to use parasitology collections to continue exploring patterns of parasite biogeography and macroecology.


Asunto(s)
Carnívoros , Helmintos , Animales , Biodiversidad , Carnívoros/parasitología , Clima , Helmintos/clasificación , Interacciones Huésped-Parásitos
3.
Parasitology ; 150(5): 446-454, 2023 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36951093

RESUMEN

Rodents living in a subterranean ecotope face a unique combination of evolutionary and ecological pressures and while host species evolution may be driven by the selective pressure from the parasites they harbour, the parasites may be responding to the selective pressures of the host. Here, we obtained all available subterranean rodent host­parasite records from the literature and integrated these data by utilizing a bipartite network analysis to determine multiple critical parameters to quantify and measure the structure and interactions of the organisms present in host­parasite communities. A total of 163 species of subterranean rodent hosts, 174 parasite species and 282 interactions were used to create 4 networks with data well-represented from all habitable continents. The results show that there was no single species of parasite that infects subterranean rodents throughout all zoogeographical regions. Nevertheless, species representing the genera Eimeria and Trichuris were common across all communities of subterranean rodents studied. Based on our analysis of host­parasite interactions across all communities studied, the parasite linkages show that community connectance (due to climate change or other anthropogenic factors) appears to show degraded linkages in both the Nearctic and Ethiopian regions: in this case parasites are acting as bell-weather probes signalling the loss of biodiversity.


Asunto(s)
Eimeria , Parásitos , Animales , Interacciones Huésped-Parásitos , Biodiversidad
5.
Zookeys ; 1151: 159-203, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37235179

RESUMEN

Published studies and ten new unpublished records included herein reveal that approximately 174 species of endoparasites (helminths and protozoans) are known from 65 of 163 species of rodents that occupy the subterranean ecotope globally. Of those, 94 endoparasite species were originally described from these rodents. A total of 282 host-parasite associations are summarized from four major zoogeographic regions including Ethiopian, Palearctic/Oriental, Nearctic, and Neotropical. Thirty-four parasite records from the literature have been identified to only the level of the genus. In this summary, ten new records have been added, and the most current taxonomic status of each parasite species is noted. Interestingly, there are no data on endoparasites from more than 68% of described subterranean rodents, which indicates that discovery and documentation are at an early stage and must continue.

6.
J Parasitol ; 107(2): 320-335, 2021 03 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33902110

RESUMEN

The genus Litomosoides Chandler, 1931, includes species that as adults occur in the thoracic and abdominal cavity of mammalian hosts and are presumably vectored by mites. The vertebrate hosts include a variety of Neotropical mammals such as phyllostomid and mormoopid bats; cricetid, sciurid, and hystricognath rodents; and didelphid marsupials. It has been suggested that Litomosoides is not a monophyletic group and that rampant horizontal transfer explains their presence in disparate groups of mammals. Herein we present a phylogenetic reconstruction including mitochondrial genes of 13 vouchered species. This phylogeny is used to reconstruct the evolutionary history of these parasites and the ancestral states of key characters used in species classification, namely, the configuration of the spicules. The historical association of these filarioids with 6 groups of mammals, as well as their ancestral geographic distributions, were reconstructed using Bayesian statistical approaches comparing alternative models of biogeography and evolution and fossil states in selected nodes of the phylogeny. The optimal reconstruction suggests a model of dispersal, extinction, and cladogenesis (DEC) driving the evolution of Litomosoides; the results suggest an origin of Litomosoides in South America and association of ancestors with phyllostomids, and strong evidence of at least 2 host-switching events: 1 of these involving cricetid rodents and the other mormoopid bats. The latter event included a simultaneous geographic expansion of the parasite lineage across South and North America. The host-switching event from phyllostomid bats into cricetid rodents occurred once these rodents diversified across South America; subsequent diversification of the latter clade resulted in 2 branches, each showing expansion of the parasites back into North America. This result suggests that both parasites and cricetid rodents established an association in South America, underwent diversification, and then dispersed into North America. Further, this clade of cricetid-dwelling species includes parasites featuring the "sigmodontis" spicule type. The identification of a single host-switching event involving the disparate lineages of Chiroptera and Rodentia offers a framework to reconstruct the gene evolution and diversification of this lineage after the host-switching event. This will help in predicting the ability of these parasites to infect sympatric mammals.


Asunto(s)
Arvicolinae/parasitología , Quirópteros/parasitología , Filariasis/veterinaria , Filarioidea/fisiología , Enfermedades de los Roedores/parasitología , Animales , Teorema de Bayes , Filariasis/parasitología , Filariasis/transmisión , Filarioidea/anatomía & histología , Filarioidea/clasificación , Genes de Helminto , Genes Mitocondriales , Marcadores Genéticos , Interacciones Huésped-Parásitos , Funciones de Verosimilitud , Filogenia , Enfermedades de los Roedores/transmisión
7.
J Parasitol ; 106(2): 235-246, 2020 04 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32206796

RESUMEN

Gaharitrema droneni n. gen., n. sp. (Digenea: Zoogonidae: Lepidophyllinae) is described from the intestine of the pudgy cuskeel, Spectrunculus grandis (Günther, 1877) (Ophidiiformes: Ophidiidae), collected at 2,800 m depth from the northeastern Pacific Ocean off Oregon. The new genus is distinguished from BrachyenteronManter, 1934 and SteganodermaStafford, 1904, the 2 closest lepidophylline genera, and from 4 other zoogonid genera erected since 2007, the last major revision of the family, by a combination of diagnostic features including a pyriform or spindle-shaped body, smooth testes and ovary, narrow ceca that reach with the vitellarium into the hindbody, an unspecialized ventral sucker, non-filamented eggs, a claviform cirrus pouch, and an unpocketed ejaculatory duct and metraterm, and the new genus lacks circumoral spines. We present updated keys to the 3 subfamilies of the Zoogonidae Odhner, 1902, as well as to the genera of the Cephaloporinae Yamaguti, 1934 and the Lepidophyllinae Stossich, 1903. A listing of the parasites known from S. grandis also is presented. This study documents the third family of digeneans (Zoogonidae) known to parasitize S. grandis, and it is a new host record (i.e., the first zoogonid reported from this host species). We discuss the relatively impressive presence of the Zoogonidae and their hosts within the deep sea. Specifically, of the 35 genera we recognize within this digenean family, 14 (40%) have deep-sea representatives. At least 37 species within 27 genera and 19 families within 11 orders of deep-sea fish are known to harbor zoogonids. Furthermore, of the 37 known deep-sea fish species parasitized by zoogonids, only 5 (13.5%) harbor 2 or more zoogonid species; the remaining 32 (86.5%) harbor only 1 parasite species each, indicating strong host specificity. Finally, the dietary ecology of S. grandis is presented, allowing us to speculate that Gaharitrema droneni may be utilizing gastropods and polychaetes as well as S. grandis to complete its life cycle in the deep sea.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedades de los Peces/parasitología , Trematodos/clasificación , Infecciones por Trematodos/veterinaria , Animales , Conductos Biliares/parasitología , Sistema Digestivo/parasitología , Peces , Vesícula Biliar/parasitología , Intestinos/parasitología , Oregon , Océano Pacífico , Trematodos/anatomía & histología , Trematodos/aislamiento & purificación , Infecciones por Trematodos/parasitología , Vejiga Urinaria/parasitología
8.
Zootaxa ; 4766(2): zootaxa.4766.2.5, 2020 Apr 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33056600

RESUMEN

Two new cestodes of the family Hymenolepididae are described from two species of rodents of the family Geomyidae collected in Mexico and Costa Rica. One new species of Hymenolepis is described from Cratogeomys planiceps Merriam 1895 from near Toluca, Mexico and another that we allocate to a new genus is described from Heterogeomys heterodus (Peters, 1865) from near Irazú Volcano, Costa Rica. Hymenolepis s. str. includes those Hymenolepididae with an apical organ, with no hooks on suckers or apical organ, and three testes. Hobergia irazuensis n. gen., n. sp. includes a hymenolepidid with an apical organ, unarmed scolex, small pockets termed foveolae, in which the suckers completely retract, and extremely bi-lobed ovary. Multivariate morphometric analysis showed good separation of these species from all other hymenolepidids possessing an apical organ and lacking a well developed rostellum and rostellar hooks in the Nearctic and Neotropical regions.


Asunto(s)
Cestodos , Infecciones por Cestodos , Enfermedades de los Roedores , Animales , Costa Rica , Femenino , México , Roedores
9.
Zookeys ; 940: 1-49, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32581630

RESUMEN

Species of Acanthobothrium have been documented as parasites of the spiral intestine of elasmobranchs. Results of a metadata analysis indicate that 114 species of elasmobranchs have been reported as hosts of 200 species of Acanthobothrium. The metadata analysis revealed that 3.7% of species of sharks and 14.9% of species of rays that have been reported as hosts to date; some species are parasitized by more than one species of Acanthobothrium. This work provides a Category designation, as proposed by Ghoshroy and Caira (2001), for each species of Acanthobothrium. These Category designations are a tool to facilitate comparisons among members of Acanthobothrium for descriptions of new species in the future.

10.
J Parasitol ; 105(6): 904-912, 2019 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31805245

RESUMEN

From the small intestines of both Ctenomys boliviensis and Ctenomys steinbachi collected from August 1984 through June 1990 from the eastern lowlands of the Department of Santa Cruz, Bolivia a total of 36 specimens of Ancylostoma were recovered. Morphological investigation and comparisons with known species described and reported from mammals in the Neotropical Region show that this is an undescribed species, herein described as new. These nematans were collected from individuals of C. steinbachi collected from near a locality called Caranda (northwest of Santa Cruz de la Sierra) and from C. boliviensis from near Santa Rosa de la Roca (northeast of Santa Cruz de la Sierra) and from cajuchis collected from 3 km west of Estación El Pailón, 30 km east of Santa Cruz de la Sierra. The new species of Ancylostoma differs from all other species of Ancylostoma known from the Neotropical Region in the presence of paired sub-terminal papillae on the dorsal ray of males.


Asunto(s)
Ancylostoma/clasificación , Anquilostomiasis/veterinaria , Enfermedades de los Roedores/parasitología , Ancylostoma/anatomía & histología , Ancylostoma/aislamiento & purificación , Anquilostomiasis/diagnóstico , Anquilostomiasis/parasitología , Animales , Bolivia , Diagnóstico Diferencial , Femenino , Intestino Delgado/parasitología , Masculino , Enfermedades de los Roedores/diagnóstico , Roedores/parasitología
11.
J Mammal ; 100(2): 382-393, 2019 Apr 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31043762

RESUMEN

Museum specimens play an increasingly important role in predicting the outcomes and revealing the consequences of anthropogenically driven disruption of the biosphere. As ecological communities respond to ongoing environmental change, host-parasite interactions are also altered. This shifting landscape of host-parasite associations creates opportunities for colonization of different hosts and emergence of new pathogens, with implications for wildlife conservation and management, public health, and other societal concerns. Integrated archives that document and preserve mammal specimens along with their communities of associated parasites and ancillary data provide a powerful resource for investigating, anticipating, and mitigating the epidemiological, ecological, and evolutionary impacts of environmental perturbation. Mammalogists who collect and archive mammal specimens have a unique opportunity to expand the scope and impact of their field work by collecting the parasites that are associated with their study organisms. We encourage mammalogists to embrace an integrated and holistic sampling paradigm and advocate for this to become standard practice for museum-based collecting. To this end, we provide a detailed, field-tested protocol to give mammalogists the tools to collect and preserve host and parasite materials that are of high quality and suitable for a range of potential downstream analyses (e.g., genetic, morphological). Finally, we also encourage increased global cooperation across taxonomic disciplines to build an integrated series of baselines and snapshots of the changing biosphere. Los especímenes de museo desempeñan un papel cada vez más importante tanto en la descripción de los resultados de la alteración antropogénica de la biosfera como en la predicción de sus consecuencias. Dado que las comunidades ecológicas responden al cambio ambiental, también se alteran las interacciones hospedador-parásito. Este panorama cambiante de asociaciones hospedador-parásito crea oportunidades para la colonización de diferentes hospedadores y para la aparición de nuevos patógenos, con implicancias en la conservación y manejo de la vida silvestre, la salud pública y otras preocupaciones de importancia para la sociedad. Archivos integrados que documentan y preservan especímenes de mamíferos junto con sus comunidades de parásitos y datos asociados, proporcionan un fuerte recurso para investigar, anticipar y mitigar los impactos epidemiológicos, ecológicos y evolutivos de las perturbaciones ambientales. Los mastozoólogos que recolectan y archivan muestras de mamíferos, tienen una oportunidad única de ampliar el alcance e impacto de su trabajo de campo mediante la recolección de los parásitos que están asociados con los organismos que estudian. Alentamos a los mastozoólogos a adoptar un paradigma de muestreo integrado y holístico y abogamos para que esto se convierta en una práctica estándarizada de la obtención de muestras para museos. Con este objetivo, proporcionamos un protocolo detallado y probado en el campo para brindar a los mastozoólogos las herramientas para recolectar y preservar materiales de parásitos y hospedadores de alta calidad y adecuados para una gran variedad de análisis subsecuentes (e.g., genéticos, morfológicos, etc.). Finalmente, también abogamos por una mayor cooperación global entre las diversas disciplinas taxonómicas para construir una serie integrada de líneas de base y registros actuales de nuestra cambiante biosfera.

12.
Trends Parasitol ; 24(3): 112-5, 2008 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18262843

RESUMEN

Host-specific parasites of humans are used to track ancient migrations. Based on archaeoparasitology, it is clear that humans entered the New World at least twice in ancient times. The archaeoparasitology of some intestinal parasites in the New World points to migration routes other than the Bering Land Bridge. Helminths have been found in mummies and coprolites in North and South America. Hookworms (Necator and Ancylostoma), whipworms (Trichuris trichiura) and other helminths require specific conditions for life-cycle completion. They could not survive in the cold climate of the northern region of the Americas. Therefore, humans would have lost some intestinal parasites while crossing Beringia. Evidence is provided here from published data of pre-Columbian sites for the peopling of the Americas through trans-oceanic or costal migrations.


Asunto(s)
Emigrantes e Inmigrantes , Helmintiasis/parasitología , Helmintos/crecimiento & desarrollo , Interacciones Huésped-Parásitos , Parasitosis Intestinales/parasitología , Animales , Clima , Helmintiasis/transmisión , Humanos , Parasitosis Intestinales/transmisión , Paleontología , Sobrevida
13.
Cladistics ; 24(4): 459-476, 2008 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34879626

RESUMEN

During our work on biodiversity of parasites of mammals of the Neotropics we collected numerous nematodes assignable to species of the family Aspidoderidae (Nemata: Heterakoidea). These nematodes occur as parasites of the cecum and large intestine of marsupials, rodents and xenarthrans (armadillos) only in the New World. As aspidoderid nematodes have been little studied beyond their alpha taxonomy, it is the purpose of the present paper to apply phylogenetic systematic methods to more completely understand the evolutionary relationships of the included species. Members of the aspidoderid subfamily Lauroiinae have had very little work applied to their systematic relationships and no systematic revisions exist that include all recognized species. Diagnostic characters that define species in this subfamily include plate-like cuticular structures on the anterior end. Herein we define a suite of 52 characters derived from studies of specimens using both light and electron microscopy. Our phylogenetic systematic analysis included the eight known species in the Lauroiinae, seven of the Aspidoderinae and four outgroup taxa. The results indicate that the Lauroiinae is paraphyletic, that the cephalic plates on the anterior end are not synapomorphies for the Lauroiinae, and that structures forming the cordon are present in all species of the family. We propose elimination of the subfamily designations in the family Aspidoderidae and we show the utility of using additional characters in the diagnosis of the family and the genera within this family. The resulting hypothesis should serve as the foundation to understand the historical associations of the nematodes with the mammals they infect. © The Willi Hennig Society 2008.

14.
J Parasitol ; 94(3): 716-26, 2008 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18605801

RESUMEN

Currently, there are 6 recognized species in the genus Rhopalias. These parasites are found in the small intestines of numerous species of marsupials throughout North and South America. Small mistakes in various classical taxonomic works have given rise to recent and numerous misidentifications of these species. In this work, we examine a total of 99 specimens across all species from museum collections in an attempt to determine informative taxonomic characters to distinguish these species. Despite confusion in the literature, accurate identification of these species can be achieved by observing the presence or absence of oral and flanking spines anterior to the oral sucker.


Asunto(s)
Parasitosis Intestinales/veterinaria , Marsupiales/parasitología , Trematodos/clasificación , Infecciones por Trematodos/veterinaria , Animales , América Central , Parasitosis Intestinales/parasitología , América del Norte , América del Sur , Trematodos/anatomía & histología , Infecciones por Trematodos/parasitología
15.
J Parasitol ; 94(5): 1098-102, 2008 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18973415

RESUMEN

The parasite fauna of 2 species of fat-tailed mouse opossums from northwestern Argentina is herein presented. Five species of helminths were found, i.e., Pterygodermatites kozeki, Hoineffia simplispicula, Oligacanthorhynchus sp., and a new species of tapeworm, Mathevotaenia sanmartini n. sp. (Cyclophyllidea: Anoplocephalidae). The new species is characterized by a calyciform scolex, relatively few testes (32), and a long cirrus sac; it occurs in fat-tailed mouse opossums at localities above 4,000 m. Those characters make it different from 6 species known to occur in marsupials from the New World, and from other species occurring in armadillos and bats. Didelphoxyuris thylamisis, H. simplicispicula, and Oligacanthorhynchus sp. appear to occur in marmosas from the Yungas region. In contrast, both P. kozeki and M. sanmartini n. sp. appear to occur exclusively in the Puna.


Asunto(s)
Cestodos/clasificación , Infecciones por Cestodos/veterinaria , Helmintiasis Animal/parasitología , Zarigüeyas/parasitología , Acantocéfalos/clasificación , Acantocéfalos/aislamiento & purificación , Animales , Argentina , Bolivia , Ciego/parasitología , Cestodos/anatomía & histología , Cestodos/aislamiento & purificación , Infecciones por Cestodos/parasitología , Intestino Delgado/parasitología , Nematodos/clasificación , Nematodos/aislamiento & purificación
16.
J Parasitol ; 94(1): 296-8, 2008 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18372655

RESUMEN

Ticks have never been reported in archaeological analyses. Here, we present the discovery of a tick from a coprolite excavated from Antelope Cave in extreme northwest Arizona. Dietary analysis indicates that the coprolite has a human origin. This archaeological occupation is associated with the Ancestral Pueblo culture (Anasazi). This discovery supports previous hypotheses that ticks were a potential source of disease and that ectoparasites were eaten by ancient people.


Asunto(s)
Dermacentor/clasificación , Dieta/historia , Heces/parasitología , Fósiles , Infestaciones por Garrapatas/historia , Animales , Vectores Arácnidos/clasificación , Arizona , Historia Antigua , Historia Medieval , Humanos , Indígenas Norteamericanos/historia , Enfermedades por Picaduras de Garrapatas/historia
17.
J Parasitol ; 93(3): 661-7, 2007 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17626361

RESUMEN

We describe a new species of Dipetalonema occurring in the body cavity of Ateles chamek (Humboldt, 1812) from north-central Bolivia. Morphologic characters serving to separate Dipetalonema yatesi n. sp. from known forms include a vagina vera with a simple tube and thin walls and a left spicule, which possesses a handle shorter than the lamina (ratio 2.7); the latter displays an anterior membranous alae similar in length to the terminal flagellum, a distal extremity of the left spicule within a simple hook and a membrane, phasmids at the basis of the lappets, and heterogeneous muscles occupying the whole cavity. Dipetalonema yatesi n. sp. can be separated from Dipetalonema robini, Dipetalonema gracile, and Dipetalonema graciliformis, between other characters, in having a simple vagina vera instead of a sinuous one, and from Dipetalonema caudispina and Dipetalonema freitasi in having the lamina of the left spicule divided in a membranous alae and a terminal flagellum.


Asunto(s)
Atelinae/parasitología , Infecciones por Dipetalonema/veterinaria , Dipetalonema/clasificación , Enfermedades de los Monos/parasitología , Animales , Bolivia , Dipetalonema/anatomía & histología , Dipetalonema/ultraestructura , Infecciones por Dipetalonema/parasitología , Femenino , Masculino , Microscopía Electrónica de Rastreo/veterinaria
18.
Acta Parasitol ; 62(2): 231-254, 2017 Jun 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28426426

RESUMEN

Pseudopecoelus mccauleyi n. sp. (Opecoelidae: Opecoelinae) is described from the intestine of the bigfin eelpout, Lycodes cortezianus (Gilbert, 1890) (Perciformes: Zoarcidae), collected at 200-800 m depths in the Northeastern Pacific Ocean off Oregon and Vancouver Island, British Columbia. The new species is distinguished by possessing a unique combination of the following diagnostic characters: vitelline fields that extend to the posterior margin of the ventral sucker; a slender, tubular and sinuous seminal vesicle that extends some distance into the hindbody; an unspecialized, protuberant ventral sucker; a genital pore at pharynx level; lobed to deeply multilobed testes; a lobed ovary; and an egg size of 68-80 µm × 30-46 µm. A single specimen of Podocotyle Dujardin, 1845 (Digenea: Plagioporinae) is also described from the intestine of an individual Coryphaenoides sp. (Gadiformes: Macrouridae) collected at 2,800 m depth off Oregon. A listing of parasites from the bigfin eelpout as well as observations of parasite diversity within relevant hosts are offered, new host and locality records are noted, and a brief discussion of Pseudopecoelus von Wicklen, 1946 in the deep sea is presented taking note of the low level of host specificity recorded (i.e. spp. of Pseudopecoelus are now known to parasitize deep-water fish from at least 20 piscine families). A new dichotomous key to the 39 recognized species of Pseudopecoelus is introduced.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedades de los Peces/parasitología , Perciformes/parasitología , Trematodos/anatomía & histología , Trematodos/clasificación , Infecciones por Trematodos/veterinaria , Animales , Enfermedades de los Peces/epidemiología , Océano Pacífico/epidemiología , Especificidad de la Especie , Infecciones por Trematodos/epidemiología , Infecciones por Trematodos/parasitología
19.
J Parasitol ; 92(4): 847-54, 2006 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16995403

RESUMEN

Aspidodera sogandaresi n. sp. (Heterakoidea: Aspidoderidae) from Dasypus novemcinctus Linnaeus, 1758 is herein described. This nematode occurs in armadillos from as far south as the canal zone of Panama, north through central Mexico, and into the southern United States. Previously identified as Aspidodera fasciata (Schneider, 1866), this new species has blunt projections on the lips and lateral expansions at the distal tips of the spicules, whereas A. fasciata has conspicuous digitiform projections on the lips, and a terminal round expansion at the tips of the spicules. Other species of the family present in North America include Aspidodera binansata Railliet and Henry, 1913; Aspidodera vazi Proença, 1937; and Lauroia trinidadensis Cameron, 1939.


Asunto(s)
Armadillos/parasitología , Infecciones por Ascaridida/veterinaria , Ascarídidos/clasificación , Animales , Ascarídidos/anatomía & histología , Ascarídidos/ultraestructura , Infecciones por Ascaridida/parasitología , América Central , Femenino , Intestino Grueso/parasitología , Masculino , Microscopía Electrónica de Rastreo/veterinaria , América del Norte
20.
J Parasitol ; 91(1): 49-52, 2005 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15856871

RESUMEN

Laelaps neacomydis n. sp. is described from the pelage of the rodent Neacomys spinosus collected in Bolivia. Collection records from northern Brazil, southeastern Peru, and central Bolivia indicate its wide distribution across Amazonas associated with rodents of the genus Neacomys. The formal taxonomic description and illustrations are derived from the adults (female and male). Two larger species of laelapine mites, Gigantolaelaps intermedius and L. boultoni, infest the same hosts at the same localities.


Asunto(s)
Infestaciones por Ácaros/veterinaria , Ácaros/clasificación , Muridae/parasitología , Enfermedades de los Roedores/parasitología , Animales , Bolivia/epidemiología , Femenino , Masculino , Infestaciones por Ácaros/epidemiología , Infestaciones por Ácaros/parasitología , Ácaros/anatomía & histología , Enfermedades de los Roedores/epidemiología
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