Description of free-living marine nematodes found in the intestine of fishes from the Brazilian coast
Author
Abolafia, Joaquín
Author
Ruiz-Cuenca, Alba N.
Author
Fernandes, Berenice M. M.
Author
Cohen, Simone C.
Author
Cárdenas, Melissa Q.
text
Zootaxa
2015
3948
3
549
572
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3948.3.8
027711dc-e863-4ad5-98f0-4cf7af904102
1175-5326
288375
1B11AA5D-9356-445D-88A7-852F64E68F35
Dorylaimopsis pellucida
(
Cobb, 1920
) Jensen, 1979
(
Figs 11
A–H & 12)
Material examined.
One female from
Diapterus rhombeus
and one male from
Eucinostomus argenteus
were examined.
Measurements.
See
Table 2
.
Description.
Adults:
Body
1.43–1.56 mm
long. Cuticle smooth, lacking transverse striations. Lip region with six fused lips having well-developed cephalic setae. Amphids spiral, located posteriorly to lip region. Stoma tubular, with three anterior protusible odontia. Pharynx short, scarcely more than five times body diameter at its base, and posteriorly swollen in a pyriform bulb. Nerve ring surrounding the pharynx at its mid-length. Excretory pore not observed. Cardia well developed, hemispheric. Intestine not differentiated.
Female:
Body with C-shaped habitus. Reproductive system didelphic-amphidelphic; ovaries short, straight, with oocytes in several rows at its germinative part and in one row for rest; oviducts very short; uteri short, swollen, about twice the corresponding body diameter, with spermatozoa inside; vagina thin and long, occupying less than half body diameter. Rectum slightly longer than anal body diameter. Tail conoid elongate, with its distal part slightly clavate and ending in a spinneret.
Male:
General morphology similar to female, with habitus almost straight and slightly ventrad curved at its posterior region. Spicules sickle-shaped, with rounded and dorsad bent manubrium, short calamus and ventrad curved lamina with hook-like tip. Gubernaculum one third of spicule length, with dorsal apophysis well-developed and directed to the tail. Tail conoid/elongate, with distal part clavate and ending in a spinneret.
Distribution.
Dorylaimopsis pellucida
was reported from
Jamaica
by
Cobb (1920)
in mud in littoral shallows, from Florida (
USA
) by
Wieser & Hopper (1967)
and from
French Polynesia
by
Boucher (1973)
. This is its first report from
Brazil
(see
Venekey
et al.
2010
).
Remarks.
The material examined is similar to other previously populations studied, especially in having sickle-shaped spicules. However, compared to the
type
material described by
Cobb (1920)
. it has a shorter body (
1.56 mm
in female and
1.43 mm
in male
vs
2.30 mm
in female and 2.00 in male), vulva slightly posterior (V= 52
vs
47) and a shorter tail (138 µm in female and
148 in
male
vs
184 µm in female and
180 in
male). It differs from the material examined by
Wieser & Hopper (1967)
in the shorter body length (
vs
1.77–2.00 mm), smaller male pharynx (189 µm
vs
250 µm), longer stoma (27–32 µm
vs
23µm), shorter spicule (91 µm
vs
110 µm) and shorter tail (148 µm
vs
200 µm). Compared to the material examined by
Boucher (1973)
, it is smaller (
vs
1.95–2.33 mm
in females and
2.19–2.35 mm
in males), and has a shorter pharynx (189–238
vs
250–283 µm), tails (138 µm in female and 148 µm in male
vs
195–223 µm in females and 175 µm in males) and spicules (91
vs
119–124 µm), and a more posterior vulva (V= 52
vs
46–48).