Published December 31, 2016 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Ascarophis filiformis Polyanski 1952

Description

Ascarophis filiformis Polyanski, 1952

Description (after Appy 1981). With characteristics of the genus.

Males: 12.4 (9.0–14.7) long, 0.105 (0.077–0.130) wide at vas deferens. Muscular oesophagus 0.343 (0.260– 0.403) and glandular oesophagus 2.117 (1.445–2.864) long. Deirids, nerve ring and excretory pore 0.175 (0.140– 0.209), 0.219 (0.185–0.258) and 0.325 (0.264–0.367), respectively, from anterior end (Fig. 54 A). Tail 0.158 (0.125–0.189) long. Right spicule 0.109 (0.094–0.129) long, spicule arcuate, notched distally. Left spicule 0.328 (0.271–0.392) long, tubular, divided into proximal shaft and blade. Ratio of left to right 1:3.0 (1:2.5 to 1:3.5). Area rugosa with about 11 longitudinal rows of cuticular elevations. 10 pairs caudal papillae: two double pairs precloacal, six pairs post-cloacal; 5th post-cloacal pair relatively small, ventral to 6th pair. Caudal alae narrow. Phasmids behind last pair post-cloacal papillae (Fig. 54 B).

Females: 25.1 (19.3–35.9) long, 0.160 (0.112–0.207) wide at vulva. Muscular oesophagus 0.386 (0.330–0.462) and glandular oesophagus 2.606 (1.845–3.424) long. Deirids, nerve ring, excretory pore and vulva 0.186 (0.143– 0.228), 0.228 (0.179–0.265), 0.340 (0.258–0.415) and 12.7 (9.5–18.3), respectively, from anterior end. Tail 0.090 (0.058–0.120) long (Fig. 54 C). Eggs 0.047 (0.042–0.050) x 0.031 (0.028–0.035) with two filaments arising from prominent knob at one pole (Fig. 54 D).

[For comments on A. filiformis see page 90–91]

Site: stomach

Hosts: Boreogadus saida (9); Gadus morhua (1, 2, 3, 4); Hippoglossus stenolepis (7, 8); Liparis dennyi (5); Reinhardtius hippoglossoides (6)

Distribution: Atlantic, Nunavut, Pacific

Records: 1. Redkozubova 1976 (AT); 2. Linkletter et al. 1977 (AT); 3. Appy 1981 (AT); 4. Appy & Burt 1982 (AT); 5. Ko 1986 (PA); 6. Arthur & Albert 1994 (AT); 7. Blaycock 1996 (PA); 8. Blaycock et al. 1998a (PA); Køie 2009 (NU)

Ascarophis morrhuae van Beneden, 1871

Description (after Ko 1986). With characteristics of the genus.

Males: 5.9 (5.1–7.2) long, 0.028 (0.026–0.029) wide at nerve ring. Buccal cavity 0.097 (0.086–0.108) long (Fig. 55 A). Muscular oesophagus 0.271 (0.226–0.297) and glandular oesophagus 1.75 (1.34–2.43) long. Nerve ring 0.134 and excretory pore 0.242 from anterior end. Four pairs pre-cloacal, and six pairs post-cloacal papillae. Left spicule 0.765 (0.740–0.790), right spicule 0.098 (0.095–0.100) long (Fig. 55 B). Tail 0.105 (0.084–0.134) long.

Females: 10.8 (8.5–12.7) long, 0.036 (0.031–0.041) wide at nerve ring. Buccal cavity 0.098 (0.085–0.115) long. Muscular oesophagus 0.246 (0.216–0.288) and glandular oesophagus 1.9 (1.1–2.3) long. Nerve ring 0.140 (0.113–0.178) and excretory pore 0.212 (0.161–0.240) from anterior end. Vulva 5.3 (4.7–6.0) from posterior end. Uterus extends from region of glandular oesophagus almost to tail tip. Tail 0.116 (0.072–0.146) long with knoblike tip (Fig. 55 C). Embryonated eggs 0.036 (0.026–0.046) x 0.024 (0.022–0.026) with one polar plug bearing two filaments although, according to Ko (1986), eggs in the posterior extension of the uterus apparently lack filaments (Fig. 55 C).

[For comments on A. morrhuae see below]

Site: alimentary tract

Hosts: Alosa sapidissima (4); Anarhichas lupus (3); Gadus morhua (2); Gasterosteus aculeatus (1);

Glyptocephalus cynoglossus (3)

Distribution: Atlantic, Labrador, Newfoundland

Records: 1. Hanek & Threlfall 1970a (AT, LB, NL); 2. Gaevskaya & Umnova 1977 (AT); 3. Zubchenko 1980 (AT);

4. Hogans et al. 1993 (AT)

Notes

Published as part of Arai, Hisao P. & Smith, John W., 2016, Guide to the Parasites of Fishes of Canada Part V: Nematoda, pp. 1-274 in Zootaxa 4185 (1) on pages 86-90, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4185.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/165530

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Family
Spiruridae
Genus
Ascarophis
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Spirurida
Phylum
Nematoda
Scientific name authorship
Polyanski
Species
filiformis
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic concept label
Ascarophis filiformis Polyanski, 1952 sec. Arai & Smith, 2016

References

  • Appy, R. G. (1981) Species of Ascarophis van Beneden, 1870 (Nematoda: Cystidicolidae) in North Atlantic fishes. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 59, 2193 - 2205. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1139 / z 81 - 297
  • Redkozubova, O. I. (1976) [Parasitological situation in the region of southern Labrador and northern Newfoundland Bank.] In: Kratkie Tezisy Dokladov II Vsesoyuznogo Simpoziuma po Parazitam I Boleznyam Morskikh Zhivotnykh, p. 5354. [Proceedings of the 2 nd All-Union Symposium on the parasites and diseases of marine animals. Abstracts.] Ministerstvo RybnogoKhozyaistva SSSR. AtlantNIRO, Kaliningrad USSR, 84 pp. (In Russian.)
  • Linkletter, L. E., Lord, E. L. & Dadswell, M. J. (1977) A checklist and catalogue of the marine fauna and flora of the lower Bay of Fundy shore of New Brunswick. Huntsman Marine Laboratory, St. Andrews, New Brunswick, vii + 68 pp.
  • Appy, R. G. & Burt, M. D. B. (1982) Metazoan parasites of cod, Gadus morhua L., in Canadian Atlantic waters. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 60, 1573 - 1579. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1139 / z 82 - 207
  • Ko, R. C. (1986) A preliminary review of the genus Ascarophis van Beneden, 1871 (Nematoda: Cystidicolidae) of the gastrointestinal tract of fishes. Department of Zoology, University of Hong Kong, Occasional Publications, 54 pp.
  • Arthur, J. R. & Albert, E. (1994) A survey of the parasites of Greenland halibut (Reinhardtius hippoglossoides) caught off Atlantic Canada, with notes on their zoogeography in this fish. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 72, 756 - 778. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1139 / z 94 - 103
  • Blaycock, R. B. (1996) The parasites of Pacific halibut, Hippoglossus stenolepis, in the northeastern Pacific: ecological patterns in time and space. Ph. D. Dissertation. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, 156 pp.
  • Blaycock, R. B., Holmes, J. C. & Margolis, L. (1998 a) The parasites of Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus stenolepis) in the eastern North Pacific: host-level influences. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 76, 536 - 547. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1139 / z 97 - 214
  • Koie, M. (2009) Boreogadus saida (Lepechin) (Gadidae): a review of its metazoan parasite fauna from Greenland, eastern Canada, Alaska and the Russian Arctic. Polar Biology, 32, 1399 - 1406. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1007 / s 00300 - 009 - 0650 - 1
  • Gaevskaya, A. V. & Umnova, B. A. (1977) [On the parasite fauna of the principal commercial fishes of the northwest Atlantic.] Biologiya Morya (Vladivostok), 4, 40 - 48. [In Russian]
  • Zubchenko, A. V. (1980) Parasitic fauna of Anarhichadidae and Pleuronectidae families of fish in the northwest Atlantic. International Commission for Northwest Atlantic Fisheries, Selected Papers, No. 6, 41 - 46.
  • Hogans, W. E., Dadswell, M. J., Uhazy, L. S. & Appy, R. G. (1993) Parasites of American shad, Alosa sapidissima (Osteichthyes: Clupeidae) from rivers of the North American Atlantic coast and the Bay of Fundy, Canada. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 71, 941 - 946. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1139 / z 93 - 123