Five new species of the family Trischistomatidae (Nematoda: Enoplida) from North and Central America, with keys to the species of Trischistoma and Tripylina
Author
Prado-Vera, Ignacio Cid Del
Author
Ferris, Howard
Author
Nadler, Steven A.
text
Zootaxa
2016
4109
2
173
197
journal article
39098
10.11646/zootaxa.4109.2.4
01332cd5-1374-4f4e-b84a-f73f543b5f40
1175-5326
257750
46B66923-EE17-4D90-8142-59708FA38F96
Key to the species of
Trischistoma
1. Body a tight spiral shape after death......................................................
T. helicoformis
n. sp.
Body not spiral-shaped after death........................................................................ 2 2. Post-uterine sac present................................................................................. 3 Post-uterine sac absent................................................................................. 7 3. Body length> 2.0 mm.................................................................................. 4 Body length <2.0 mm.................................................................................. 5 4. Body length
2.9–3.2 mm
; tail length 220–242 µm..................................
T. subtillissimum
Andrássy, 2011
Body
length 4.0–
4.1 mm
; tail length 250–260 µm....................................
T. tenuissimum
Andrássy, 2011
5. Male absent; V = 75%; tail length 81–98 µm................................................
T. otaika
Zhao, 2011
Male present; body length 1.0–
1.9 mm
..................................................................... 6 6. Body length
1.4–1.9 mm
; a = 45–77; female tail length 115–150 µm, spicules 25–35 µm long; male tail with one supplement....................................................
T. monohystera
(de
Man, 1880
) Schuurmans-Stekhoven, 1951 Body
length
1.4–1.6 mm
; a = 38–44; V = 81–83%; female tail length 80–96 µm; spicules 40–44 µm long; male tail with 2–3 supplements...................................................................
T. equatoriale
Andrássy, 2006
Body
length 1.0–
1.3 mm
; a = 41–54; female tail length 63–104 long; spicules 29–34 µm long................................................................................
T. veracruzense
Cid
del Prado-Vera, Ferris & Nadler, 2010 Body length 1.0–
1.1 mm
; a = 49–53; c = 12–13, female tail length 82–86 µm; spicules 25–32 µm long...................................................................................................
T. gracile
Andrássy, 1985
7. Body length <1.0 mm..................................................................................8 Body length> 1.0 mm................................................................................. 10
8. Body length
0.4–0.6 mm
; female tail length 40–50 µm..............................
T. minor
Tahseen & Nusrat, 2010
Body
length
0.6–0.9 mm
; V = 73–80%.................................................................... 9
9. Cervical setae absent; pharynx length 155 µm; tail length 50–60 µm; b = 4.4–4.8...............
T. pellucidum
Cobb, 1913
Single
latero-ventral cervical setapresent; pharynx length 171–198 µm; tail length 50–64 µm......
T. waiotama
Zhao, 2011
Paired
lateral cervical setae present; pharynx length 137–219 µm; tail length 44–72 µm............
T. triregius
Zhao, 2011
10. Body length
0.80–1.2 mm
; a = 34–45; V = 67–73%; female tail length 51–84 µm..................
T. corticulensis
n. sp.
Body length 1.0–
1.1 mm
; a = 39–59; female tail length 34–92 µm.............................................. 11
11. a = 45–59; c = 17–29; b = 4.1–4.8; V = 67–73%; female tail length 34–57 µm.......................
T. ripariana
n. sp.
a = 39–47; c = 11–15; b = 3.8–4.1; V = 72–76%; female tail length 75–92 µm...................
T. tukorehe
Zhao, 2011