We present the first ultrastructural description of spermiogenesis and of the spermatozoon of Rubenstrema exasperatum (Omphalometridae), an intestinal parasite of Sorex araneus (Soricidae). Spermiogenesis begins with the formation of the differentiation zone delimited at the base by the ring of the arched membranes and bordered by cortical microtubules. This area contains two centrioles associated with striated rootlets and with an intercentriolar body. It also contains the nucleus and numerous mitochondria. The intercentriolar body is made up of seven electron-dense layers. The two centrioles give rise to two free flagella that grow orthogonally to the median cytoplasmic process. Additionally, flagellar rotation is followed by the proximodistal fusion of the flagella with the median cytoplasmic process, while the nucleus and mitochondria migrate along the spermatid. The constriction of the ring of arched membranes gives rise to the young spermatozoon. The mature spermatozoon of R. exasperatum shows several ultrastructural characters found in digenean spermatozoa such as two axonemes, mitochondrion, two bundles of parallel cortical microtubules, nucleus, and granules of glycogen. External ornamentation of the plasma membrane and spinelike bodies are also present in the spermatozoon of this species. In the present study, we produced additional spermatological data concerning a previously unexplored family, and we also compare our data to the existent ultrastructural descriptions within the Digenea in order to assess the use of several characters proposed as phylogenetic tools.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00436-010-2178-2 | DOI Listing |
J Helminthol
November 2024
A.N. Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, RAS, Leninsky Prospect 33, Moscow, 119071Russia.
Phylogenetic studies of aberrant species are of considerable scientific interest because their taxonomic rank in traditional systems based on morphological characters is not infrequently overestimated. (Braun, ) is one of the few psilostomid digeneans devoid of the pharynx. This is considered a sufficient basis for assigning it and similar species to the subfamily Apopharynginae.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiology (Basel)
August 2024
Laboratory for Zoology and Parasitology, Institute of Ecology of Volga River Basin RAS, Samara Federal Research Scientific Center RAS, Togliatti 445003, Russia.
The taxonomic status of many species of the family Cyclocoelidae is still unclear. Two species of cyclocoelids, and , were collected from the air sacs of birds ( and ) inhabiting the Middle Volga region (European Russia). Here, we provide the first detailed morphological description of these cyclocoelids and combine it with the first molecular phylogenetic analysis of Cyclocoelidae from birds in Russia based on partial sequences of their 28s rDNA and coI mtDNA genes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSyst Parasitol
May 2024
Department of Natural Sciences, Middle Georgia State University, Macon, GA, 31206, USA.
Ochoterenatrema Caballero, 1943 is a genus of lecithodendriid digeneans that prior to this study included 8 species parasitic in bats in the Western Hemisphere. Species of Ochoterenatrema possess a unique morphological feature in form of the pseudogonotyl on the sinistral side of the ventral sucker. In this study, we describe 2 new species of Ochoterenatrema from bats in Ecuador.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Helminthol
April 2024
Centro de Estudios Parasitológicos y de Vectores (CEPAVE), FCNyM, UNLP, CONICET, Boulevard 120 s/n e/61 y 62 (1900), La Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Six species of freshwater turtles dominate the Chaco-Pampa Plain in southern South America and their parasites have been relatively understudied, with most records concentrated in Brazil. Particularly in Argentina, there are only scattered records of parasites for most of the turtles that inhabit the region, leaving a large knowledge gap. The purpose of the present contribution is to increase the knowledge of the internal parasites of six species of freshwater turtles from Argentina, after 15 years of fieldwork, by providing new hosts and additional geographic records for many host-parasite relationships.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSyst Parasitol
August 2023
Queensland Museum, Biodiversity and Geosciences Program, South Brisbane, QLD, 4101, Australia.
Integration of morphological and molecular approaches to species delineation has become an essential part of digenean trematode taxonomy, particularly when delimiting cryptic species. Here, we use an integrated approach to distinguish and describe two morphologically cryptic species of Hysterolecitha Linton, 1910 (Trematoda: Lecithasteridae) from fishes of Moreton Bay, Queensland, Australia. Morphological analyses of Hysterolecitha specimens from six fish species demonstrated a complete overlap in morphometric data with no reliable differences in their gross morphological characters that suggested the presence of more than one species.
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