Publications by authors named "S A Bullard"

Diplomonorchis micropogoni Nahhas & Cable, 1964 was considered a junior subjective synonym of Diplomonorchis leiostomi Hopkins, 1941 in 1969. Diplomonorchis leiostomi has since been widely reported from the coastal Western Atlantic between Delaware Bay and southern Brazil. Until now, taxonomically verifiable DNA sequence data for D.

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We herein provide a supplemental description of Benedenia seriolae (Yamaguti, 1934) Meserve, 1938 (Monogenoidea: Capsalidae Baird, 1853) based on specimens we collected from the skin of wild-caught greater amberjack (Seriola dumerili) in the northern Gulf of Mexico (GOM). Our specimens of B. seriolae from the GOM resemble those of Benedenia humboldti Baeza, Sepúlveda, and González, 2019 (from yellowtail amberjack, Seriola lalandi Valenciennes, 1833 [Carangidae] off Chile) by having a large body (>7000 μm in total length), non-overlapping anterior and posterior hamuli, an entirely sinistral and convoluted vas deferens, and a common genital pore as well as by lacking glands of Goto.

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We examined several American alligators, Alligator mississippiensis (Daudin, 1802) (Crocodilia: Alligatoridae) from Louisiana, Alabama, and South Carolina in August 2022. The intestine of one alligator from Alabama was infected by Dracovermis occidentalis Brooks and Overstreet, 1978 (Platyhelminthes: Digenea: Liolopidae Odhner, 1912), a seldom collected and incompletely described trematode that lacks a representative nucleotide sequence. Liolopidae comprises 5 genera and 15 species: Liolope spp.

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Three fish blood flukes (Aporocotylidae Odhner, 1912) infect mullets (Mugiliformes: Mugilidae): Yamaguti, 1970 and Martin, 1975 infect striped mullet, Linnaeus, 1758 in the Central Pacific Ocean (Hawaiian Islands) and Brisbane River (Australia), respectively; Knoff & Amato, 1992 infects Lebranche mullet, Valenciennes, 1836 from the Southwestern Atlantic Ocean (Brazil). White mullets were cast-netted from the mouth of Deer River, a coastal saltmarsh of Mobile Bay, in the north-central Gulf of Mexico and examined for blood fluke infections. Specimens of Warren & Bullard n.

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