Two New Species Of Aporcelaimellus Heyns, 1965 (Nematoda: Dorylaimida) From The Tropics
Author
Andrássy, I.
text
Acta Zoologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae
2004
2004-11-24
50
2
97
107
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.12586875
2064-2474
12586875
Aporcelaimellus insularis
sp. n.
(
Figs 3 C–D
,
6 A–D
and
7 A–C
)
Holotype
female:
L =
1.39 mm
; a = 18; b = 3.7; c = 57; c’ = 0.6;
V
= 54 %. Odontostyle 28 µm.
Paratype
females
(n = 8): L =
1.20–1.46 mm
; a = 14–18; b = 3.3–3.9; c = 63–70; c’ = 0.5–0.6;
V
= 52–54 %.
Holotype
female on slide No. 14793.
Paratypes
:
twenty-one females
and
eleven juveniles
. Type locality and habitat:
Le Niol
,
Seychelle Islands
,
300 m
above sea-level, moist soil from rocks. – Further localities on
Seychelle Islands
: Morne Blanc,
500 m
above sea-level, rain forest, soil with roots; Praslin,
Vallee
de Mai
, detritus from rocks; collected
June 2000
by L.
HUFNAGEL
.
Body very robust, 68–96 µm wide at mid-region, in consequence of fixation C- or G-shaped. Cuticle smooth, 2.5–3.0 µm thick and 5.5–7.0 µm thick on dorsal side of tail, consisting of the two usual layers of different refraction; inner layer thicker than outer. Labial region
18–20 m
wide (a’ = 65–80), set off by a deep constriction. Lips more or less fused, rounded. Body at posterior end of stylet 1.9–2.0 times, at posterior end of oesophagus 3.4–4.2 times as wide as head. Amphid more than half as wide as corresponding body.
Odontostyle strong, 28–30 µm long and 5 µm thick, 1.4–1.5 times as long as labial width, 7.8–8.0% of oesophagus length, much thicker than cuticle; its ventral wall about twice as thick as dorsal wall. Guiding apparatus aporcelaimoid, dorsally thicker than ventrally. Oesophagus 360–406 µm long, occupying 26–30% of body length, muscular in its entire length, fairly suddenly widened at 43–48%. Glandularium 148–188 µm long. Out of the oesophageal gland nuclei, the dorsal nucleus and the two posterior sublateral nuclei are most conspicuous. Dorsal nucleus at 15–17% of entire length of body. Cardia conoid with a dorsal unicellular body. Distance between posterior end of oesophagus and vulva as long as or somewhat shorter than oesophagus. Intestine, especially in its posterior half, heavily folded. Prerectum often very spacious, thin-walled, short, 1.0–1.8, rectum 1.0–1.5 anal body widths long.
Female.
Amphidelphic with equally developed gonads occupying 28–32% of body length. Vulva transverse with strongly sclerotized, heart-shaped inner lips (sclerotized pieces). Vagina (together with vulval lips) 29–33 µm, occupying one-third or more of body width. Each gonad 2.4–2.8 times as long as body diameter. In younger females (without eggs) each branch of uterus hardly longer than one body width. Oviducts short and narrow.
One egg
at a time, 78–80 × 40–45 µm, nearly as long as body width. Spermathecae in egg-bearing females filled with oval spermatozoa. Vulva–anus distance 25–33 times as long as tail. Tail quite short, only half the anal body diameter, ventrally convex, dorsally initially also convex, but near the tip becoming profoundly concave, provided with a 4–6 µm long, sharply offset, dorsally bent conoid peg.
Male.
Not observed.
Juvenile.
Its tail is quite similar to the female tail.
Fig. 3.
Maps of oesophageal gland nuclei in the two new
Aporcelaimellus
species. A
–B:
A. amazonicus
sp. n.
, two females; C–D:
A. insularis
sp. n.
, two females
Fig. 4.
Schematic drawings of tails of nine
Aporcelaimellus
species
each showing concave contour on dorsal side (tails subdigitate, digitate or mammillate). A:
A. estonicus
(
KRALL
, 1957); B:
A. cocophilus
(
LOOS
, 1949)
; C:
A. chauhani
BAQRI
et
KHERA
, 1975
; D:
A. gerlachi
(
MEYL
, 1956
);
E:
A. maitai
YEATES
, 1967
; F:
A. kikereensis
BAQRI
et
COOMANS
, 1973
; G:
A. paracentrocercus
(
DE
CONINCK
, 1935); H:
A. pycnus
(
THORNE
, 1939)
; I:
A. alius
ANDRÁSSY
, 2002
Fig. 5.
Schematic drawings of tails of nine
Aporcelaimellus
species
each showing concave contour on dorsal side (tails subdigitate, digitate or mammillate). A:
A. heynsi
BAQRI
et
JAIRAJPURI
, 1968
; B:
A. duhouxi
(
ALTHERR
, 1963)
; C:
A. glandus
BOTHA
et
HEYNS
, 1991
; D:
A. samarcandicus
(
TULAGANOV
, 1949)
; E:
A. medius
ANDRÁSSY
, 2002
; F:
A. seinhorsti
(
MEYL
, 1957
); G:
A. krygeri
(
DITLEVSEN
, 1928
); H:
A. malagasi
HEYNS
, 1996
; I:
A. stilus
(
KIRJANOVA
, 1951
)
Fig. 6.
Aporcelaimellus insularis
sp. n.
A–B: anterior ends; C–D: vulval regions (note the heartshaped vulval lips). (Scale bars 20 µm each)
Diagnosis.
A very robust, middle-sized species with offset head, strong stylet, aperture occupying half of the stylet length, at middle enlarged oesophagus, heart-shaped vulval lips, short and wide prerectum and with short, dorsally concave tail possessing a dorsally curved peg.
It shall be emphasized that the structure of the tail appears as if it is very permanent within this species: all the
22 females
and
11 juveniles
studied show the same tail shape.
Remarks.
Aporcelaimellus insularis
sp. n.
belongs to the short-tailed (c’ shorter than 1) members of the genus, and among them, to those possessing a mammillate tail. They are
A. gerlachi
(
MEYL
, 1956
),
A. kikereensis
BAQRI
et
COOMANS
, 1973
,
A. krygeri
(
DITLEVSEN
, 1928
)
HEYNS
, 1965
,
A. malagasi
HEYNS
, 1996
,
A. paracentrocercus
(
DE
CONINCK
, 1935
)
BAQRI
et
COOMANS
, 1973
and
A. stilus
(
KIRJANOVA
, 1951
)
ANDRÁSSY
, 1986. In its very characteristic tail structure, the new species is clearly distinguished from each species listed above (see
Figs 7 A–C
,
4 A–I
and
5 A–I
). Furthermore, it differs from
gerlachi:
body shorter (
vs
. 1.9–2.2 µm), stylet longer (
vs
. 20–21 µm), prerectum shorter (
vs
. 3.5–4.0 anal body diameters), tail shorter (
vs
. c’ = 1) and other shaped; from
kikereensis
:
vulva more anterior (
vs
. 60–61%), tail shorter (
vs
. c’ = 1) with sharply separate peg; from
malagasi
:
body shorter (
vs
.
2.2–3.3 mm
), cuticle without punctuation, stylet comparatively longer (
vs
. 1.0–1.1 labial diameters long) with shorter aperture (
vs
. two-thirds of stylet length), terminal peg of tail offset and dorsally directed; from
krygeri
:
body shorter (
vs
. 2.5–3.0 mm), a’ value smaller (
vs
. 110–115), tail peg offset and dorsally bent; from
paracentrocercus:
body smaller (
vs
.
1.8–1.9 mm
), gonads much shorter (
vs
. 40–50% of body length), terminal peg shorter and dorsally curved; from
stilus:
body shorter (
vs
.
1.9–2.3 mm
), oesophagus longer (
vs
. b = 4.5–4.8), terminal peg offset and dorsally directed.
Fig. 7.
Aporcelaimellus insularis
sp. n.
A–C: posterior ends of three females (B: holotype). (Scale bar 20 µm)
Etymology.
The species name
insularis
(Latin)
means: island-inhabiting, or an islander, and refers to the
type
locality, the
Seychelles
, where this new species seems to be generally distributed.