Trematodes of the family Heterophyidae (Digenea) in Mexico: a review of species and new host and geographical records
Author
Scholz, T.
Author
Aguirre-Macedo, M. L.
Author
Salgado-Maldonado, G.
text
Journal of Natural History
2001
2001-12-31
35
12
1733
1772
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00222930152667087
journal article
10.1080/00222930152667087
1464-5262
5275922
Ascocotyle
(
Phagicola
)
longa
Ransom, 1920
(®gure 7)
Metacercaria
Morphology.
(Morphology based on
26 specimens
from
Mugil cephalus
Linnaeus
and
M. curema
Valenciennes
in Cuvier and Valenciennes.) Cyst widely oval, thin-walled, 154±286 long and 131±207 wide. Body pyriform, 323±554 long and 115±202 wide, covered with scale-like tegumental spines. Remnants of eye-spots posterior to pharynx. Region between pharynx and ventral sucker containing oval cells with granular contents (? gland cells). Preoral lobe moderately developed; oral sucker 36±54 long and 36±54 wide, with well-developed posterior appendage, often sinuous, only rarely reaching to pharynx. Oral sucker surrounded by one row of 16 massive circumoral spines (
n
519), 9±15 long and 3±4 wide. Prepharynx 40±102 long; pharynx strongly muscular, 30±45 long and 23±34 wide; oesophagus relatively short. Intestinal caeca narrow and long, surrounding ventral sucker and primordium of ovary, curved medially at level of anterior branch of excretory bladder, ®lled with spherical corpuscles. Ventral sucker spherical, well-developed, postequatorial, 23±40 long and 23±37 wide. Sucker width ratio 1
5
0.71±0.90. Testes symmetrical, near posterior extremity, 27±50 long and 27±55 wide. Seminal vesicle two-chambered, postacetabular. Genital sac anterosinistral to acetabulum, containing bipartite gonotyl composed of two pad-like lobes (®gure 7C). Primordium of ovary postacetabular, 18 long and 40 wide. Excretory bladder X-shaped, with short and wide arms, ®lled with numerous, dark granules. Flame cell formula most probably (posterior ducts not observed completely) 2 [(21 2)1 (21 2)] 516. First ¯ame cells posterolateral to oral sucker; second at pharyngeal level; third at level of caecal bifurcation; fourth anterolateral to acetabulum; ®fth and sixth posterolateral to ventral sucker; seventh lateral to anterolateral to testes and eighth posteromedial to testes.
FIG. 7.
Ascocotyle
(
Phagicola
)
longa
. Metacercariae from the heart of
Mugil cephalus
, RõÂo Cuitzmala
, Jalisco (A±C) and the musculature of gill arches of
Dormitator latifrons
, Marismas de Chalacatepec
, Jalisco (F), and adult from the intestine of
Ardea herodias
, CelestuÂn
lagoon, YucataÂn (E). (A) Total view of excysted metacercaria, dorsally; (B) encysted metacercaria; (C) terminal genitalia, note bipartite gonotyl (g); (D±F) circumoral spines (
n
5 16). (A, C) Free-hand schematic drawing; not in scale.
Second intermediate hosts
.
Gobiesox
X
uviatilis
Briggs and Miller (
Cyprinodontidae
);
Dormitator latifrons
(Richardson) (Eleotridae)
;
Mugil cephalus
,
M. curema
(Mugilidae)
.
Site
of infection
. Heart, musculature of gill branches, body musculature, rarely intestinal wall, liver, gonads, mesenteries.
Distribution
.
Jalisco
(El JabalõÂ, Marismas de Chalacatepec, RõÂo Cuitzmala,
Salinas
de Careyes, San NicolaÂs).
References from
Mexico
.
Scholz (1999)
; present study.
Specimens deposited
. BMNH 2000.6.1.9, CHCM-352, CNHE 3928, IPCAS D-445, USNPC 88537, 90192, 90193.
Adult
Morphology
.
Scholz (1999)
redescribed the species on the basis of examination of the
type
specimens and reference material from diOEerent hosts and geographical regions.
De
W
nitive host
.
Ardea herodias
.
Site
of infection
. Intestine.
Distribution
. YucataÂn (CelestuÂn).
References from
Mexico
. Present study.
Specimens deposited
. CNHE 3926, IPCAS D-295.
Comments
. Metacercariae are frequent parasites of brackish-water ®sh, above all grey mullets (
Hutton and Sogandares-Bernal, 1959
,
1960
;
Manfredi and Oneto, 1997
). In
Mexico
, they have been found only in ®sh from its western (Paci®c) coast (
Scholz, 1999
; present study).
Adults of
A.
(
P.
)
longa
found in a number of birds, mainly herons, and mammals (see
Scholz, 1999
for review) are reported from
Mexico
for the ®rst time.
Scholz (1999)
synonymized
A.
(
P.
)
arnaldoi
Travassos, 1929
,
A
. (
P.
)
byrdi
(
Robinson, 1956
)
and
A
. (
P
.)
longicollis
(Kuntz and Chandler, 1956) with
A.
(
P.
)
longa
that is the most widely distributed species of
Ascocotyle
reported from North and South America, Europe, North Africa and Asia (Middle East) (see
Scholz, 1999
for references).
Chie
et al
. (1992) reported human infections caused by a species of
Phagicola
(5
Ascocotyle
(
Phagicola
)), supposed to be
A.
(
P.
)
longa
by
Manfredi and Oneto (1997)
. The latter authors discussed the capacity of this trematode to infect humans because of heavy infections of mullets with its metacercariae encysted in the muscles.