A taxonomic revision of the genus Anoplocephaloides Baer, 1923 sensu Rausch (1976), with the description of four new genera (Cestoda: Anoplocephalidae)
Author
Haukisalmi, Voitto
text
Zootaxa
2009
2057
1
31
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.186734
6fda694f-2d1b-4a55-b7ec-079f8c487e19
1175-5326
186734
Microcephaloides
Haukisalmi, Hardman, Hardman, Rausch & Henttonen, 2008
(Fig. 2)
FIGURE. 2
.
Microcephaloides
spp.
A
. Strobila of
M
. cf.
variabilis
from
Microtus agrestis
(scale-bar 5.0 mm).
B
. Scolex of
M
. cf.
variabilis
from
Microtus agrestis
(scale-bar
0.20 mm
).
C
. Mature proglottis of
M
. cf.
variabilis
from
M. oeconomus
(scale-bar
0.30 mm
).
D
,
E
. Development of uterus in
M
.
variabilis
from
Thomomys talpoides
(scale-bars
0.30 mm
).
F
. Genital ducts and early uterus of
M
.
variabilis
from
T. talpoides
(scale-bar
0.10 mm
).
Diagnosis:
Strobila fairly short and slender. Scolex small. Suckers embedded in scolex, directed laterally or antero-laterally. Neck (unsegmented region) present. Proglottides craspedote, much wider than long. Velum straight or arched anteriorly. Genitalia single. Genital pores unilateral, positioned in middle of proglottis margin or slightly posteriorly. Genital atrium weak; genital papilla absent. Genital ducts cross osmoregulatory canals dorsally. Internal and external seminal vesicles present. Cirrus sac short, overlapping or barely extending across ventral longitudinal canal. Retractor muscle of cirrus sac absent. Testes arranged in single transverse group in antiporal part of proglottis, extending beyond antiporal ventral longitudinal canal. Ovary very large relative to proglottis size, more or less poral, sparsely lobed. Vagina short, not extending across ventral longitudinal canal; enters genital atrium ventral or postero-ventral to cirrus-sac. Early uterus transverse tube in anterior part of proglottis, with or without fenestrated extremities, ventral to testes, crossing longitudinal osmoregulatory canals ventrally and bilaterally; poral end terminates anterior to cirrus sac and external seminal vesicle or partly overlaps them. Fully developed (pregravid) uterus usually sparsely sacculated with wide anterior and posterior sacculi that are usually pressed against adjacent sacculi throughout their development; distinct transverse trunk absent. Female reproductive organs mature simultaneously with or slightly earlier than male organs; testes persist after resorption of female glands overlapping developing uterus. Pyriform apparatus present. Parasitic in geomyid (
type
hosts), cricetid (
Arvicolinae
) and spalacid rodents. Type-species:
M. variabilis
(
Douthitt, 1915
)
Haukisalmi, Hardman, Hardman, Rausch & Henttonen, 2008
; cotypes USNPC 7375, 7408, 7410 and 49524–49531 from
Geomys bursarius
. Other species:
M. neofibrinus
(Rausch, 1952)
n. comb.
(syn.
Paranoplocephala neofibrinus
Rausch, 1952
),
M. mascomai
(
Murai, Tenora & Rocamora, 1980
)
n. comb.
(syn.
Paranoplocephala mascomai
Murai, Tenora & Rocamora, 1980
),
M. tenoramuraiae
(
Genov & Georgiev, 1988
)
Haukisalmi, Hardman, Hardman, Rausch & Henttonen, 2008
(syn.
Anoplocephaloides tenoramuraiae
Genov & Georgiev, 1984
),
M. nevoi
(
Fair, Schmidt & Wertheim, 1990
)
n. comb.
(syn.
Paranoplocephala nevoi
Fair, Schmidt & Wertheim, 1990
) and
M. krebsi
(
Haukisalmi, Wickström, Hantula & Henttonen, 2001
)
Haukisalmi, Hardman, Hardman, Rausch & Henttonen, 2008
(syn.
Paranoplocephala krebsi
Haukisalmi, Wickström, Hantula & Henttonen, 2001
). Notice that
M. variabilis
-like cestodes include at least 6 more or less cryptic species, as determined by molecular methods (
Haukisalmi
et al.
2008b
).
Remarks.
Microcephaloides
differs unequivocally from all the other genera considered here with respect to the transverse, longitudinal and/or dorso-ventral position of the early uterus, except
Anoplocephaloides
,
Paranoplocephaloides
,
Hokkaidocephala
and
Gallegoides
(Table 2; see also
Haukisalmi
et al.
2008b
). The differences between
Microcephaloides
and
Anoplocephaloides
have been evaluated above.
Microcephaloides
differs from
Paranoplocephaloides
by its wider body, laterally or antero-laterally directed suckers and unilateral genital pores.
Microcephaloides
differs from
Hokkaidocephala
primarily by the unique uterine development in the latter genus, but also by the smaller scolex and presence of a neck in the former genus.
Gallegoides
may be differentiated unambiguously from
Microcephaloides
by the distribution of the testes and alternation of the genital pores.
Microcephaloides neofibrinus
differs from the congeneric species by its slightly larger scolex, slightly longer vagina and, perhaps, different
type
of fully developed (pregravid) uterus (approaching the “arborescent”
type
in
M. neofibrinus
; cf. Figs. 8–11). However, none of these differences is striking, and because only a single, partly contracted specimen (the
holotype
) was available,
M. neofibrinus
is not separated as an independent genus.
Microcephaloides nevoi
differs from the congeneric species by having testes positioned antiporal
and
anterior to ovary (only antiporal to ovary in the other congeneric species), but this difference is not considered significant at the generic level (see below).
The monophyly of several
M. variabilis
-like species from
Microtus
-voles and
M. krebsi
from collared lemmings (
Dicrostonyx
spp.) was confirmed by
Haukisalmi
et al.
(2008b)
, However, there are yet no phylogenetic data for
M. variabilis
from the
type
host (
Geomys
Rafinesque
),
M. neofibrinus
,
M. tenoramuraiae
,
M. nevoi
and
M. mascomai
.
Microcephaloides
spp. inhabit the anterior small intestine (duodenum).