Taxonomic revision of the genus Glypthelmins Stafford, 1905 (Platyhelminthes: Digenea: Plagiorchiida), parasites of anurans in the Americas
Author
León, Pérez-Ponce De
text
Zootaxa
2008
1882
1
45
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.184219
43bdd1b2-1689-4c52-a26d-a1d9c20178e4
1175-5326
184219
Glypthelmins hyloreus
Martin, 1969
(
Figs. 21–22
)
Synonyms
Glypthelmins hyloreus
Martin, 1969
: 747
–752.
Figs. 1–6
(Description and Life cycle);
Hylotrema hyloreus
,
Sullivan (1972: 46)
[This author transfers
G
.
hyloreus
to the genus
Hylotrema
].
Taxonomic summary
Type-host:
Hyla regilla
.
Habitat:
Intestine.
Type-locality
: 5 Mi East Corvallis, Oregon,
U.S.A.
Type
specimens deposition:
USNPC
70463.
Diagnosis:
This species is differentiated by the following combination of traits: Pharynx smaller than ventral sucker, testes oblique and cirrus pouch curved. Vitelline glands extend anteriorly from caecal bifurcation to approximately midway between testes and tips of the intestinal caeca. Vitelline follicles caecal and extracaecal not confluent.
Description:
Body elongated, with the maximum width in testicular region; anterior and posterior ends of the body are rounded. Tegument covered with small scale-like spines extending from anterior end to posterior end of body. Oral sucker subterminal, round, larger than pharynx and ventral sucker. Ventral sucker rounded, pre-equatorial. Oral sucker/ventral sucker length ratio 1:0.8. Prepharynx short, wider than long. Pharynx globose. Medial glands surround anterior and posterior margins of pharynx. Oesophagus thin, large, with external cell-glands on both sides. Caeca narrow, symmetrical. Testes oval, intercaecal, oblique, equatorial. Genital pore is located mid-ventral, just anterior to ventral sucker. Cirrus pouch slightly curved, larger than ventral sucker, containing bipartite seminal vesicle, followed by an elongated, large and unarmed cirrus. Ovary sinistral, oval, extends dorsally to posterior margin of ventral sucker. Seminal receptacle oval, usually posterodorsal to ovary. Uterus mostly intercaecal, with some loops extending to the caecal and extracaecal region. No uterine loops are located in the posterior end of body. Muscular metraterm opens into the genital pore. Vitelline gland follicular. Vitelline follicles commence at level of caecal bifurcation and extend to posterior margin of testes. Follicles are not confluent at any level. Eggs operculated, yellowish, and measure 47–52 µm long by 24–27µm wide. Excretory vesicle “I” shaped and extends to the level of testes. Excretory pore terminal.
FIGURES 21–22.
Glypthelmins hyloreus
Martin, 1969
.
21.
Mature specimen, ventral view ex
Pseudacris triseriata
, Nebraska, U.S.A. (personal collection Dr. Daniel R. Brooks). Scale bar = 0.3 mm.
22.
Detail of the terminal genitalia ex
Pseudacris triseriata
, Nebraska, U.S.A. (personal collection Dr. Daniel R. Brooks). Scale bar = 0.1 mm.
Host, geographic distribution and specimen deposition
Hyla regilla
: (=
Pseudacris regilla
):
U.S.A.
: Near Corvallis, Linn County, Oregon (
Martin, 1969
); Spokane County, Washington (Lang, pers. com.
in
O´
Grady 1987
). Specimen deposition: USNPC: 70463, 70464.
Pseudacris triseriata
:
Canada
: George Lake, Alberta, (Holmes, per. com.
in
O´
Grady 1987
).
U.S.A.
: Colorado (
Ubelaker
et al.
1967
;
Brooks 1976b
);
3 miles
south of Lincoln; 0.25 miles north of Davey;
5 miles
south of Genoa;
8 miles
south,
2 miles
east of Humboldt;
Peru
;
2 miles
west of Springview;
3 miles
east of Valentine; 0.5 miles south,
1 mile
west of Bloomington;
2 miles
south,
1 mile
west of Mead;
10 miles
west of Lincoln, Nebraska (
Brooks, 1976b
); Ogallala, Nebraska (
Rannala, 1990
,
1991
,
1992
). Specimen deposition: HWML: 20080, 20209, 21334, 33823, 33824.
Life cycle
The life cycle was originally described by
Martin (1969)
. Adults inhabit the intestine of hylid frogs (
Pseudacris
), and eggs are released with the feces of the host. Once in the water, eggs are ingested by the snail
Lymnaea stagnalis
(Lymneadae)
. In the intestine, miracidium emerge from eggs and transform into mother and then daughter sporocyst in which gymnocephalan cercariae are formed. Cercaria are expelled from the snail and swim actively looking for the second intermediate host, tadpoles of
Pseudacris regilla
and
P
.
triseriata
. Once the cercariae contacts the skin of the hylids, they move along the surface to find the nasal cavities and then transform into metacercariae when they are in the mesentery of the host. Metacercariae remain unencysted until the molting process of the hylids. The route of metacercariae into the digestive tract has not been determined, but it has been speculated that metacercariae penetrate the intestinal wall due to its prominent penetration glands. In the intestine of the hylids, metacercariae develop into adults.
GenBank
cox
1:
AY278059
(381 bp);
5.8s
and ITS2:
AY278066
(413); 28S:
AY278050
(1274 bp).