This review brings together decades of work on elasmobranch tapeworms. The field has advanced significantly over the past 20 yr, with an emphasis on the discovery and description of novel taxa, and the establishment of phylogenetic frameworks for individual orders and their interrelationships. Tapeworms parasitizing elasmobranchs represent 9 orders and include 977 species and 201 genera-over 250 species and 50 genera are new within the last 2 decades. The 9 orders are treated individually, highlighting recent assessments of phylogenetic relationships informed by molecular sequence data. All but the "Tetraphyllidea" are monophyletic. Although much remains to be learned about their interrelationships, existing phylogenetic hypotheses suggest that elasmobranch tapeworms have played a key role in the evolution of the cestodes of essentially all other vertebrate groups. The apical organ is a defining feature (i.e., a synapomorphy) of a clade consisting of acetabulate taxa and Litobothriidea. Novel hook amino acid composition data support the independent origin of hooks in the various groups of hooked tapeworms. Cestode records exist for representatives of most of the major groups of elasmobranchs, however skates (Rajiformes) and catsharks ("Scyliorhinidae") are particularly neglected in terms of species sampled. The majority of tapeworm species are extremely host-specific exhibiting species-specific (i.e., oioxenous) associations with their hosts. Rapid advancements in elasmobranch taxonomy, with over 300 of the 1,200 species appearing new in the past 20 yr, signal the need for careful attention to be paid to host identifications; such identifications are best documented using a combination of specimen, photographic, and molecular data. Above the species level, many cestode taxa are restricted to host orders, families, or even genera. Documentation of these affiliations allows robust predictions to be made regarding the cestode faunas of unexplored elasmobranchs. Trypanorhynchs are the notable exceptions. Life cycles remain poorly known. Recent applications of molecular methods to larval identifications have reinvigorated this area of research. Tapeworms are more diverse in elasmobranchs of tropical and subtropical waters, but they occur globally not only at the poles and in deep waters, but also in freshwaters of South America and Southeast Asia. The cestode faunas of batoids are much more speciose and complex than those of sharks. The faunas of deeper water sharks are particularly depauperate. The tapeworms of elasmobranchs and their hosts are now among the most well documented host-parasite systems in existence. This system has not yet reached its potential as a resource for investigations of basic ecological and evolutionary principles.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1645/14-516.1 | DOI Listing |
Zootaxa
May 2024
Curso de Pós-graduação/Instituto de Biociências; Universidade de São Paulo; São Paulo; São Paulo; Brazil; Departamento de Zoologia/Instituto de Biociências; Universidade de São Paulo; São Paulo; São Paulo; Brazil.
Here I describe Aberrapex panamensis sp. nov., a parasite of the rough eagle ray Aetomylaeus asperrimus from the eastern Pacific coast of Panama, and Aberrapex catarinensis sp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Morphol
November 2024
Faculty of Biology, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia.
Syst Parasitol
June 2024
Department of Biology, Faculty of Sciences, University of Guilan, Rasht, Iran.
Platybothrium Linton, 1890 is a genus parasitizing sharks of the families Carcharhinidae and Sphyrnidae. No new species has been assigned to the genus in the 20 years since its last treatment. In the present study, a new species is described from the Persian Gulf, which is the second report of a species of Platybothrium in the Indian Ocean.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Parasitol
September 2024
Department of Biology, Faculty of Sciences, University of Guilan, Rasht, Iran.
Purpose: The members of the tetraphyllidean genus Calliobothrium exhibit a high degree of host specificity in the shark genus Mustelus. In the Indian Ocean, where M. mosis occurs dominantly, there is no information on Calliobothrium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInvertebr Syst
April 2024
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, Unit 3043, 75 N. Eagleville Road, Storrs, CT 006269-3043, USA.
The rhinebothriidean tapeworm family Escherbothriidae has recently been expanded to include the genus Ivanovcestus , species of which parasitise arhynchobatid skates. Similarities in morphology and host associations between Ivanovcestus and Semiorbiseptum - a genus yet to be assigned to one of the families in the order Rhinebothriidea - led us to explore the possibility that Semiorbiseptum might also belong in the Escherbothriidae. Morphological similarities with Scalithrium ivanovae , Scalithrium kirchneri and Rhinebothrium scobinae , all of which also parasitise arhynchobatid skates, raised questions regarding the generic placements of these species.
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