Bothriocephalidean tapeworms (Cestoda) of freshwater fish in Africa, including erection of Kirstenella n. gen. and description of Tetracampos martinae n. sp.
Author
Kuchta, Roman
Author
Burianová, Alena
Author
Jirkú, Miloslav
Author
Chambrier, Alain
Author
Oros, Mikuláš
Author
Brabec, Jan
Author
Scholz, Tomáš
text
Zootaxa
2012
2012-05-11
3309
1
35
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3309.1.1
53c82f0b-6ddb-4a56-8940-5a3e53bc1dc6
1175-5326
280992
Tetracampos ciliotheca
Wedl, 1861
(
Figs. 28–32
,
41–52
)
Syns:
Clestobothrium clarias
Woodland, 1925
;
Polyonchobothrium cylindraceum
forma
major
Janicki, 1926
;
P
.
cylindraceum
forma
minor
Janicki, 1926
;
Polyonchobothrium fulgidum
Meggitt, 1930
;
Polyonchobothrium clarias
(
Woodland, 1925
)
Meggitt, 1930
;
Polyonchobothrium ciliotheca
(
Wedl, 1861
) Dollfus, 1934
;
Polyoncobothrium ciliotheca
(
Wedl, 1861
) Yamaguti, 1959
;
Polyoncobothrium clarias
(
Woodland, 1925
) Yamaguti, 1959
.
Type
host:
Clarias anguillaris
(Linnaeus)
(
Siluriformes
:
Clariidae
).
Other definitive hosts:
Clarias gariepinus
(Burchell)
,
Clarias liocephalus
Boulenger
,
Clarias werneri
Boulenger.
Life cycle:
Khalil & Thurston (1973)
observed hatching of eggs in 10 minutes after their transfer to tap water. Liberated coracidia had embryophore 36–42 μm long by 30–35 μm wide, cilia 18 μm long and embryonic hooks 1 μm in length (
Diab 2007
). Freshwater copepods serve as the first intermediate hosts, in which procercoids developed within 20–26 days. Developed procercoids (252–610 μm long) were infective for small fish, such as tilapias (
Oreochromis niloticus
). Experimentally infected tilapias were exposed to
C
.
gariepinus
, in which adult worms were found (
Diab 2007
;
Ramadan 2007
). Small fish that harbour immature cestodes in natural conditions, such as schilbeid and mochokid catfish (
Schilbe uranoscopus
,
Synodontis membranacea
and
S
.
zambezensis
) and tilapias (
Oreochromis niloticus
,
Sarotherodon galilaeus
) (
Douellou 1992
;
Owolabi 2008
;
Eissa
et al.
2011a
,
b
), may play a role of paratenic hosts.
FIGURES 41–48
. Line drawings of
Tetracampos ciliotheca
Wedl, 1861
ex
Clarias anguillaris
from the Sudan (IPCAS C-466).
41
, Complete worm.
42
, Scolex, dorsoventral view.
43
, Complete circle of hooks.
44
, Gravid segment, ventral view.
45
, Detail of hooks.
46
, Cross-section of gravid segment at level of cirrus-sac.
47
, Egg.
48
, Gravid segment entirely filled with eggs.
Type
locality:
Egypt
, Nile River.
Distribution:
Lower
Guinea
–
Gabon
;
Gambia
basin –
Senegal
; Turkana basin –
Kenya
(all parts of the Lake Turkana); Limpopo basin –
South Africa
; Upper
Guinea
–
Sierra Leone
(Moa River);
Niger
basin –
Mali
,
Nigeria
; Nile basin –
Egypt
,
Ethiopia
,
the Sudan
,
Tanzania
,
Uganda
; Volta basin –
Ghana
; Zambezi basin –
Zimbabwe
,
Malawi
. Besides Africa,
T
.
ciliotheca
has been reported also from Asia –
Israel
and
Turkey
, probably as a consequence of introduction with host – see Remarks (
Paperna 1964
;
Soylu & Emre 2005
; present study).
Prevalence and intensity of infection:
Usually high, with values between 52% and 100% in most studies from
Egypt
,
Nigeria
and
South Africa
(
Aderounmu & Adeniyi 1972
;
Shotter 1980
;
Faisal
et al
. 1989
;
Anosike
et al
. 1992
;
Barson & Avenant-Oldewage 2006
). In the present study the overall prevalence was 5–17% in
the Sudan
, 26% in
Ethiopia
and 33% in
Kenya
(
Appendix 1
).
Type
material:
Not known to exist. To enable taxonomic comparative studies in the future, the specimen from
Clarias
sp. from
Blue Nile, Sennar Dam,
the Sudan
(field No. Sud 438) is designated as
neotype
and is deposited in
IPCAS
(No. C-466).
Material studied:
Type
material:
Clestobothrium clarias
Woodland, 1925
ex
C
.
anguillaris
(
BMNH
1965.2.24.29–35)
;
Polyonchobothrium fulgidum
Meggitt, 1930
ex
C
.
anguillaris
(
BMNH
1932.5.31.801–806)
;
Polyonchobothrium interruptus
– nomen nudum
(
USNPC
74291–2)
;
vouchers:
P
.
cylindraceum
ex
C
.
anguillaris
from
Mali
, Diafarabe (
MNHNP
C79)
;
P
.
clarias
ex
C
.
anguillaris
from
Senegal
, Guerina (
RMCA
34773)
and
Ghana
(
BMNH
1976.4.12.155–161)
;
ex
C
.
gariepinus
from
Nigeria
, Lekki Lagoon and Kainji Dam (
BMNH
2004.2.18.38, 1970.8.24.37)
;
from
Tanzania
,
Lake Victoria
,
Mwanza Gulf
(
MHNG 33983
)
,
Zimbabwe
, Save-Runde River Floodplain (
BMNH
2006.9.1.6)
and
Sierra Leone
(
BMNH
1965.2.24.59–6)
;
ex
Heterobranchus bidorsalis
from
Senegal
, Guerina (
RMCA
34723)
;
ex
Schilbe uranoscopus
from unknown locality, collected by McClelland (RVC C1108)
;
T
.
ciliotheca
ex
Clarias
sp. from
Egypt
,
Luxor
, collected by
A. de Chambrier
(
MHNG 31547
;
17.iv.2001
)
;
ex
C
.
gariepinus
from
South Africa
, Rietvlei Dam, collected by M. Barson and from
Turkey
, Antalya (
IPCAS
C–466)
; new material:
tens of
T
.
ciliotheca
ex 2/18
C
.
anguillaris
from
the Sudan
, Kostí and Sennar Dam;
12 worms ex 3/23
C
.
anguillaris
from
Senegal
, Niokolo-Koba National Park,
Gambia
River collected by B. Koubková (2004; Sen 52, 53, 121)
;
84/322
C
.
gariepinus
from
Ethiopia
, Lake Tana and Great Rift Lakes (Awasa, Langano and Ziway)
,
14/43
C
.
gariepinus
from
Kenya
, Lake Turkana
and
5/30
C
.
gariepinus
from
the Sudan
, Al Kawa, Khartoum, Er Roseires Dam, Sennar Dam
;
4/88
Clarias
sp. from
the Sudan
, Khartoum, Lake
Nubia
(Asuan Dam), Sennar Dam; one
C
.
gariepinus
from Lake
Malawi
, collected by S. Hendrix (SSH96-09-M-1)
. The new material is deposited in
BMNH
(Nos. 2012.3.20.16–25),
IPCAS
(No. C-466),
MHNG
(Nos. 55309, 55337, 55338, 62879, 62904, 63006–63328),
USNPC
(Nos. 105395–105400, 105404–105408) and
ZMB
(Nos. 7517–7523).
FIGURES 49–52
. Photomicrographs of histological sections of
Tetracampos ciliotheca
Wedl, 1861
in the intestinal wall of
Clarias gariepinus
from Ethiopia (IPCAS C-466).
49
, Cross-section of the intestinal wall at the level of the scolex.
50
, Crosssection of the intestinal wall with several parts of the worm.
51
, Detail of apical part of the scolex in the intestinal wall.
52
, Detail of the parasite and host surface. * indicates the body of the parasite.
Published records:
Wedl (1861)
;
Woodland (1925)
;
Janicki (1926)
;
Meggitt (1930)
;
Tadros (1968)
;
Khalil (1969
,
1973
);
Aderounmu & Adeniyi (1972)
;
Khalil & Thurston (1973)
;
Amin (1978)
;
Tadros
et al
. (1979)
;
Shotter (1980)
;
Wabuke-Bunoti (1980)
;
Onwuliri & Mgbemena (1987)
;
Faisal
et al
. (1989)
;
Mashego & Saayman (1989)
;
Imam & El-Askalany (1990)
;
Imam
et al
. (1991a
,
b
);
Anosike
et al
. (1992)
;
Douellou (1992)
;
Al-Bassel (2003)
; El-Garhy (2003);
Rizkalla
et al
. (2003)
; Hamanda &
Abdrabouh (2004)
;
Oniye
et al
. (2004)
;
Akinsanya & Otubanjo (2006)
;
Barson & Avenant-Oldewage (2006)
;
Olofintoye (2006)
;
Diab (2007)
;
Ayanda (2008
,
2009a
,
b
);
Barson
et al
. (2008)
;
Mwita & Nkwengulila (2008)
;
Moyo
et al
. (2009)
;
Bichi & Yelwa (2010)
;
Madanire-Moyo & Barson (2010)
;
Madanire-Moyo
et al
. (2010)
;
Eissa
et al
. (2011a
,
b
).
Re-description
(based on 25 complete worms from
Ethiopia
,
Kenya
and
the Sudan
):
Bothriocephalidea
,
Bothriocephalidae
. Strobila small, oval or almost spherical in cross section, up to
30 mm
long; maximum width 475. External and internal segmentation present; segments wider than long, acraspedote (
Figs. 31
,
41, 44
).
Two pairs of osmoregulatory canals; dorsal canals narrow; ventral canals wide, connected by transverse anastomoses. Inner longitudinal musculature well developed, muscle fibres diffused (
Fig. 46
). Surface of strobila covered with capilliform filitriches.
Scolex elongate to ovoid, 285–510 (396 ± 62) long by 115–245 (165 ± 42) wide (n = 20) (
Figs. 28
,
42
). Apical disc weakly developed, 104–290 (156 ± 63) wide and 35–120 (97 ± 24) high (n = 20), armed with 25–35 (29 ± 2; n = 18) small hooks (
Amin 1978 reported as many as 41 hooks
) 12–51 (37 ± 7; n = 537) long, arranged in two lateral semicircles separated from each other on dorsal and ventral side. Hooks variable in size in each semicircle, with largest hook 40–51 (46 ± 3; n = 20) in each corner of apical dic (
Figs. 29
,
43, 45
). Bothria elongate, shallow, 200– 410 (308 ± 56) long by 57–120 (79 ± 22) wide (n = 20) (
Figs. 28
,
42
). Surface of scolex covered with capilliform filitriches and numerous tumuliform globular structures (diameter around 1) (
Fig. 30
). Neck absent, first segments appearing immediately posterior to scolex (
Fig. 41
).
Immature segments 80–235 (144 ± 39) long by 84–261 (167 ± 57) wide; length/width ratio 0.41–2.58: 1 (n = 38) (
Fig. 41
). Mature segments wider than long by, 90–400 (182 ± 68) long by 135–480 (255 ± 96) wide; length/ width ratio 0.3–1.0: 1 (n = 41) (
Fig. 41
). Gravid segments wider than long, 178–488 (198 ± 69) long by 180–455 (316 ± 71) wide; length/width ratio 0.5–1.2: 1 (n = 35) (
Figs. 31
,
41, 44, 48
).
Testes medullary, spherical, 5–15 (10 ± 3; n = 21) in number per segment, 21–48 (33 ± 7; n = 60) in diameter, forming 2 narrow longitudinal bands (4–9 testes per band), confluent between segments, absent medially and near lateral margins (
Fig. 44
). Cirrus-sac large, thin-walled (thickness of sac wall up to 4), oval, 32–66 (48 ± 9) long by 28–68 (45 ± 10) wide (length/width ratio 0.77–1.73: 1) (n = 15), equatorial (39–59% of length of mature segment; n = 10) (
Fig. 46
). Internal seminal vesicle absent; cirrus unarmed, opening into genital atrium. Vas deferens forms numerous loops lateral to cirrus-sac; internal sperm ducts strongly coiled. Genital pore dorsal, median, pre-equatorial.
Ovary symmetrical, forming two spherical lobes, 31–91 (59 ± 18) long by 76–183 (113 ± 29) wide (n = 14) (
Fig. 44
). Vagina a straight, thin-walled tube, 6–16 (11 ± 4; n = 9) in diameter, opens posterior to cirrus-sac into genital atrium; vaginal sphincter absent. Vitelline follicles few, small, spherical, 12–40 (19 ± 8; n = 28) in diameter, medullary, distributed among testes, visible only in some mature and gravid proglottides (
Fig. 44
).
Uterine duct winding, short, filled with eggs (
Fig. 41
). Uterus thin-walled, median, spherical, enlarged in gravid segments, occupying 57–80% of segment surface (
Figs. 41, 48
). Uterine pore thick-walled, opens in centre of uterus. Eggs widely oval to spherical, 28–72 (46 ± 9) long by 27–51 (40 ± 6) wide (n = 46), with external hyaline membrane and internal granular layer surrounding fully formed oncospheres, 17–45 (27 ± 8) long by 17–31 (23 ± 4) wide (n = 41) in terminal segments; eggs enlarging during their development in uterus (
Figs. 32
,
47
).
Remarks:
Taxonomic history of bothriocephalideans parasitic in clariid catfish in Africa is complicated because apparently conspecific tapeworms were reported under different species names and were placed in several genera. Most commonly, they were identified as
Polyonchobothrium clarias
(
Woodland, 1925
)
, but this species is a junior synonym of
Tetracampos ciliotheca
(see
Kuchta
et al
. 2008b
).
Wedl (1861)
described
T
.
ciliotheca
from cestodes parasitic in
Heterobranchus anguillaris
(=
Clarias anguillaris
) from
Egypt
. Since the original description was incomplete, most subsequent authors considered
T
.
ciliotheca
as a
nomen nudum
or placed it in the order Proteocephalidea or even
Tetraphyllidea
, because its eggs possess a transparent, hyaline external envelope (
Southwell 1925
;
Janicki 1926
).
Kuchta
et al
. (2008a
,
b
) resurrected the genus with
T
.
ciliotheca
as its
type
and only species because it differs from other bothriocephalideans in egg morphology, the possession of an unflattened strobila, almost round in cross section, and medullary position of vitelline follicles. The latter characteristic is also present in two other bothriocephalidean cestodes,
Ptychobothrium
Lönnberg, 1889
and
Taphrobothrium
Lühe, 1899
, but they parasitize marine teleosts and their morphology is otherwise markedly different (see
Kuchta
et al
. 2008b
).
Tetracampos ciliotheca
is a common parasite of clariid catfish and it is widely distributed throughout Africa, with most published reports from
Egypt
,
Nigeria
,
South Africa
and
the Sudan
(see above). The cestode has also been reported from
Israel
(
Paperna 1964 – as
P
.
clarias
) and
Turkey
[
Soylu & Emre 2005
– as
Polyonchobothrium magnum
(Zmeev, 1936)
; present study], apparently as a consequence of import of African species of
Clarias
to these countries. Records of
T
.
ciliotheca
in other catfish, such as
Heterobranchus bidorsalis
from
Senegal
(present study;
Khalil 1973
; RMCA 34723),
Bagrus bayad
from
Egypt
(
Imam
et al
. 1991a
) and
Chrysichthys auratus
from
the Sudan
(present study), may represent incidental infections or these fish may serve as postcyclic or accidental hosts.
Omar M. Amin deposited tapeworms found in
C
.
anguillaris
from
Egypt
under the name
Polyonchobothrium interruptus
(USNPC 74291–2), but that species has never been formally described and thus represents
nomen nudum
. In 1978 Amin himself identified these tapeworms as
Polyonchobothrium clarias
(=
T
.
ciliotheca
).
Host-parasite relationships of
T
.
ciliotheca
and its fish host have been studied by several authors (most of them referred to this species as
Polyonchobothrium clarias
– see above). The tapeworms penetrates deeply into the mucosa of the intestinal wall and may cause mechanical injury by the attachment of the apical crown of hooks on the scolex (
Tadros 1979
;
Akinsanya & Otubanjo 2006
; present study
Figs. 49–52
). Adults of
T
.
ciliotheca
were also found in the gall bladder (
Amin 1978
;
Shotter 1980
;
Faisal
et al
. 1989
;
Barson
et al
. 2008
), where tapeworms may cause formation of nodular outgrowths in the mucosa (
Wabuke-Bunoti 1980
).
Faisal
et al
. (1989)
reported complete penetration of
T
.
ciliotheca
tapeworms through the intestinal wall, with their attachment in the liver, spleen and ovary. In fish with perforated intestine, the intestinal contents filled the peritoneal cavity (
Wabuke-Bunoti 1980
). Despite the high number of examined hosts and observed cestodes, we never found
T
.
ciliotheca
tapeworms in extraintestinal localization.