Unlike their marine counterparts, tropical freshwater clupeids receive little scientific attention. However, they sustain important fisheries that may be of (inter)national commercial interest. Africa harbours over 20 freshwater clupeid species within Pellonulini. Recent research suggests their most abundant parasites are gill-infecting monogenean flatworms within . After inspecting specimens of 12 freshwater clupeids from West and Central Africa, mainly sourced in biodiversity collections, we propose 11 new species of which we describe using their haptoral and genital morphology. Because of their high morphological similarity, species delineation relies mostly on the morphometrics of anchors and hooks. Specifically, earlier, molecular taxonomic work indicated that the proportion between the length of the anchor roots, and between the hook and anchor length, is diagnostic. On average, about one species of exists per pellonuline species, although harbours four species and two, while and share a gill monogenean species. This study more than quadruples the number of known species of , also almost quadrupling the number of pellonuline species of which monogeneans are known. Since members of are informative about their hosts' ecology, evolutionary history, and introduction routes, this enables a parasitological perspective on several data-poor African fisheries.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8697917 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11123578 | DOI Listing |
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