Description of Quercorhabditis rajouriensis gen. n., sp. n. (Nematoda: Rhabditidae)
Author
Shah, Ali Asghar
Author
Hussain, Abid
Author
Vaid, Shavish
text
Zootaxa
2013
3630
2
385
390
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3630.2.13
ad13682d-2873-4ede-bd34-9a1c069556c1
1175-5326
219602
A7A77F37-4F14-4961-9000-EA3F1A1B4362
Quercorhabditis rajouriensis
gen. n.
, sp. n.
Etymology.
The genus name is derived from the name of host plant, oak (
Quercus leucotrichophora
L.).
Relationships
. The new genus resembles
Diploscapteriodes
Rahm,
1928 in
the shape of the cheilostom, presence of amphidelphic gonads, leptoderan bursa and long conoid tail. However, it can be differentiated from that genus in having a labial region set off by constriction and wider than adjoining body, heavily sclerotized cheilostom, absence of a ridge-like tooth in the gymnostom, spicules with a free dorsal arm, a somewhat boatshaped gubernaculum and in having ten pairs of bursal papillae (labial region sharply offset, cheilostom not strongly sclerotized, ridge-like tooth present in gymnostom, spicules without dorsal arm, gubernaculum simple and nine pairs of bursal papillae, all lying post -cloacal in
Diploscapteroides
). The new genus also resembles
Curviditis
(Dougherty, 1953) Andrássy, 1983
,
Rhabditella
(Cobb, 1929) Chitwood, 1933
and
Metarhabditis
Tahseen
et
.
al
.,
2004 in
having spicules with free dorsal arm. However, it can be differentiated from these related genera in having heavily sclerotized cheilostom with arched rhabdions, hardly differentiable stegostom (cheilostom not cuticularised, arched rhabdions absent and stegostom well developed in
Curviditis
,
Rhabditella
and
Metarhabditis
). The new genus can further be differentiated from
Curviditis
and
Rhabditella
in having well developed bursa (bursa rudimentary in
Curvidits
and
Rhabditella
) and from
Metarhabditis
in having leptoderan bursa with ten pairs of bursal papillae arranged in 3+4+3 arrangement (bursa pseudopeloderan with eight pairs of bursal papillae arranged in 1+1+1+3+2 arrangement in
Metarhabditis
).