A Revision of the Malagabdellinae (Arhynchobdellida: Domanibdellidae), with a Description of a New Species, Malagabdella niarchosorum, from Ranomafana National Park, Madagascar
Author
BORDA, ELIZABETH
text
American Museum Novitates
2006
2006-09-08
3531
1
1
16
http://www.bioone.org/perlserv/?request=get-abstract&doi=10.1206%2F0003-0082(2006)3531%5B1%3AAROTMA%5D2.0.CO%3B2
journal article
5807
10.1206/0003-0082(2006)3531[1:AROTMA]2.0.CO;2
37a4119c-488d-4591-b0b2-5652396ce549
0003-0082
4712713
35DF1B5F-1EE5-424D-A13A-F9DA579A9E7D
Malagabdella vagans
(
Blanchard, 1917
)
Figures 16–23
Haemadipsa vagans
Blanchard, 1917: 665
, fig. 14.
Haemadipsa vagans
—
Soos, 1967: 426
.
Malagabdella vagans
—
Richardson, 1975: 142
;
Richardson, 1978: 860–863
, fig. 4 A–D);
Sawyer,
1986: 762.
TYPE MATERIAL
:
Syntype
,
Madagascar
— east coast forests, 1882,
Lantz
(
MNHN 751
; no. 143;
N
5
1)
.
Syntype
,
Madagascar
— Montagne d’Ambre, Diego-Suarez, 1890,
Dr. Catat
? (
MNHN 802
;
N
5
3)
.
ADDITIONAL
MATERIAL
:
Six
specimens (
AMNH 5288
,
Annelida
) fixed in 95% ethanol and six specimens (
AMNH 5289
,
Annelida
) fixed in formalin (two specimens used for SEM), in forest adjacent to town of
Andasibe
,,
3 km
from entrance of
Analamazoatra
(
Perinet Special Reserve
) (
MG02-04
), near the
Antananarivo
–
Taomasina
railroad,
March 3, 2002
.
Brilliant green or orange when alive. Pale in color, almost neutral when fixed. Only markings found dorsally are paramedial wavy lines that become faded posteriorly. Dorsal and ventral papillae present (fig. 16).
+
male atrium (a), small bulbous ejaculatory bulbs (eb) and coiled epididymes (e).
15.
Female reproductive system showing paired globular ovaries, each with independent oviducts that converge into the common oviduct (co) that inserts into a simple vaginal tube (vt).
Figs. 16–23.
Malagabdella vagans
.
16.
Dorsal view showing beige background field with paramedial wavy lines that fade posteriorly.
17.
Anterior view of cephalic somites, with partial view of the right five eyespots (arrows) and a set of producible duognathous jaws (j).
18.
Lateral view of the posterior somital
Duognathous, monostichodont jaws armed with serrated edge of minute teeth (fig. 17). Cephalic somites with five pairs of eyespots, one on each of
II
,
III
,
IV
,
V
, and
VI
. Somites
II
,
III
, and
IV
uni-annulate,
V
and
VI
twoannulate and three-annulate, respectively, VII three-annulate. Midbody somites VIII–XXIII five-annulate. Nephropores lateral in furrow of b2/a
2 in
each somite, with first nephropore observed in IX b2/a2. XXIV– XXVII uniannulate (fig. 18). Six annuli between XXIII a2 and anus. Respiratory auricles present, bilobed, and formed along the lateral margins of XXIV a2 to XXVII. Caudal sucker, ventral, with 58 friction rays ventral on sucker. Small prehensile lobe present (fig. 19).
General organization and regional morphology of male and female reproductive systems not typical haemadipsoid (figs. 20–23). Male genital pore opens at the furrow of XI b5/b6 and the female genital pore opens at the furrow of XIII b1/b2 (fig. 20). Gonopores separated by seven complete annuli. Median reproductive system micromorphic and entirely in XI (figs. 21, 22). Male atrium bulbous. Short ejaculatory ducts exit the atrium ventrally in anterior XI and run laterally, posteriorly directed, giving rise to small ovoid ejaculatory bulbs. Epididymes, small, approximately the size of the ejaculatory bulbs, tightly coiled, and recurve anteriad at XII. Median female reproductive system micromorphic (fig. 23). Single pair of globular ovaries in XII, with short thin walled oviducts that coil and converge into the common oviduct. The common oviduct is tightly coiled in the median and exits in XIII. Oviducal glandular sac and muscular vaginal tube absent.
REMARKS:
Richardson (1975)
noted a resemblance in the somital annulation pattern of
H. vagans
to
Idiobdella seychellensis
and, therefore, originally included
H. vagans
as a member of the genus
Idiobdella
.
Richardson (1978)
revised his previous classification of the leeches of
Madagascar
based on a specimen from the collection of the National Museum of Natural History that he identified as
Malagabdella vagans
(
U.S.
Nat. Mus. Cat. No. 55386; Acc. 242082;
2 km
east of Perinet, Tamatave Province; off human skin). This resulted in the revision of the genus
Malagabdella
, the removal of the genus from Idiobdellidae, and the establishment of the
Malagabdellinae (
Richardson, 1978
)
.
Interestingly,
Richardson (1978)
reported that the specimen of
M. vagans
was engorged with blood and with the ‘‘annulation obliterated’’. Furthermore, it does not appear that he examined any
type
material for this species. Therefore, it is difficult to imagine that the annulation patterns he described and illustrat- ed for this species came from this specimen (see also
M. fallax
REMARKS), but rather a conversion of the annulation patterns described by
Blanchard (1917)
. In his revision,
Richardson (1978)
described the male reproductive system for Malagasy leeches based on this USNM specimen of
M. vagans
. This resulted in an overgeneralization for the characteristics of male reproductive systems for the
Malagabdella
species. It should be mentioned that the observation of the male system was facilitated by the USNM specimen having been ‘‘split through transversely at XII/ XIII providing access to the anterior portion of the male paired system and the male median region’’ (
Richardson, 1978: 863
), yet he illustrates the majority of male system (i.e., atrium and ejaculatory bulbs and epididymes) found within XI.