Published March 9, 2023 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Pentaloculum macrocephalum Alexander 1963

  • 1. Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, 75 N. Eagleville Rd., Storrs, Connecticut, 06269 - 3043, U. S. A. & veronica. m. bueno @ uconn. edu; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 7786 - 5043
  • 2. Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, 75 N. Eagleville Rd., Storrs, Connecticut, 06269 - 3043, U. S. A. & janine. caira @ uconn. edu; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 9597 - 6978

Description

Pentaloculum macrocephalum Alexander, 1963 emended

(Fig. 2A–F)

Type and only known host: Typhlonarke aysoni (Hamilton), blind sleeper ray; (Torpediniformes: Narkidae Fowler).

Type locality: New Zealand.

Site of infection: Spiral intestine.

Specimens deposited: SEM voucher LRP No. 10949 (CR-136-A); scolex prepared for SEM retained with JNC at the University of Connecticut.

Sequence data: KF685877 and OQ186458 (hologenophores, LRP Nos. 8347 [CR-136, TE-171] and LRP No. 9826 [CR-136-1, VB229]).

Emendation. Based on one scolex observed with SEM and its strobilar voucher.

The description of this species by Alexander (1963) should be emended to include the following information on the configuration of the microtriches of the scolex and proglottid anatomy.

Apex of scolex not observed (Fig. 2A); distal bothridial surfaces (Fig. 2B) and all proximal bothridial surfaces (Figs. 2D F) densely covered with long-tipped aristate gladiate spinitriches, gladiate spinitriches, and capilliform filitriches. Cephalic peduncle (Fig. 2C) densely covered with large gladiate spinitriches, filitriches not observed.

Vitelline follicles arranged in two lateral bands; lateral bands confluent posterior to ovary.

Remarks. The specimen of P. macrocephalum examined here with SEM and light microscopy was collected from the same individual of Typhlonarke aysoni as the specimen provisionally identified as Pentaloculum n. sp. 1 in the molecular phylogenetic analysis of Caira et al. (2014), in which the host was identified as T. tarakea. We have followed Eudy et al. (2019) in referring to this cestode taxon as P. macrocephalum and this host taxon as T. aysoni. Comparison of the hologenophore of the specimen included in the analysis of Caira et al. (2014), which was fixed in ethanol, with the whole mount of the strobila of the specimen examined here with SEM, which was fixed in formalin, confirms this identification.

Notes

Published as part of Bueno, Veronica M. & Caira, Janine N., 2023, Phylogenetic relationships, host associations, and three new species of a poorly known group of " tetraphyllidean " tapeworms from elasmobranchs, pp. 30-50 in Zootaxa 5254 (1) on pages 33-35, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5254.1.2, http://zenodo.org/record/7710794

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Additional details

Biodiversity

References

  • Alexander, C. G. (1963) Tetraphyllidean and diphyllidean cestodes of New Zealand selachians. Transactions of the Royal Society of New Zealand, 3, 117 - 142.
  • Caira, J. N., Jensen, K. & Ruhnke, T. R. (2017) " Tetraphyllidea " van Beneden, 1850 relics. In: Caira, J. N. & Jensen, K. (Eds.), Planetary Biodiversity Inventory (2008 - 2017): Tapeworms from Vertebrate Bowels of the Earth. University of Kansas, Natural History Museum, Special Publication No. 25. Lawrence, Kansas, pp. 371 - 400.
  • Caira, J. N., Jensen, K., Waeschenbach, A., Olson, P. D. & Littlewood, D. T. J. (2014) Orders out of chaos - molecular phylogenetics reveals the complexity of shark and stingray tapeworm relationships. International Journal for Parasitology, 44, 55 - 73. https: // doi. org / 10.1016 / j. ijpara. 2013.10.004
  • Eudy, E., Caira, J. N. & Jensen, K. (2019) A new species of Pentaloculum (Cestoda: " Tetraphyllidea ") from the Taiwan Saddled carpetshark, Cirrhoscyllium formosanu m (Orectolobiformes: Parascylliidae). Journal of Parasitolog y, 105, 303 - 312. https: // doi. org / 10.1645 / 18 - 132