Revision of Capsaloides (Monogenea: Capsalidae) with a redescription of C. magnaspinosus Price, 1939 from the nasal tissue of Tetrapterus audax (Istiophoridae) collected off Nelson Bay, New South Wales, Australia
Author
Chisholm, Leslie A.
Author
Whittington, Ian D.
text
Zootaxa
2006
1160
1
20
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.172308
45e0b265-6cef-4c98-ad08-8d016d410a13
11755326
172308
Capsaloides marielenae
(
LamotheArgumedo, 1968
)
LamotheArgumedo, 1996
(
Figs 3
B, 4C)
Synonyms:
Caballerocotyla marielenae
LamotheArgumedo, 1968
;
Capsaloides mariaelenae
(
LamotheArgumedo, 1968
)
LamotheArgumedo, 1996
.
Typehost:
Istiophorus platypterus
(Shaw, 1792) (Istiophoridae)
. The typehost was originally recorded as
Istiophorus greyi
Jordan
& Evermann, 1926 which is now considered a synonym of
I. platypterus
(see
Froese & Pauly 2005
).
Typelocality:
Puerto Angel, Oaxaca,
Mexico
[Pacific Ocean].
Site:
Gills.
Specimens examined:
Two
paratypes
(CNHE 000133); 1
paratype
(USNPC 75517).
Remarks
This species was originally described by
LamotheArgumedo (1968)
as a member of
Caballerocotyla
but was later transferred to
Capsaloides
by
LamotheArgumedo (1996)
because of the morphology of the haptoral accessory sclerites and the bifid posterior pair of septa. The number of cusps associated with the dorsomarginal body sclerites decrease posteriorly (
Fig. 3
B). There are 6–8 sclerties (with 5–7 cusps) in the left isolated anterior group of dorsomarginal sclerites. The right isolated group of dorsomarginal sclerites has 3 bi or tricuspid sclerites. Close examination of typematerial revealed that the body shape, the morphology of the haptoral accessory sclerites (
Fig. 4
C) and the dorsomarginal body sclerites (
Fig. 3
B), which end in the posterior third of the body, are very similar to those of
C. istiophori
(described from the same host species off Hawaii),
C. perugiai
and
C. tetrapteri
.
We therefore consider
C. marielenae
a synonym of
C. perugiai
(see also Remarks under
C. istiophori
,
C. perugiai
and
C. tetrapteri
).
LamotheArgumedo (1968)
described the egg as rhomboidal with an appendage present on 1 pole.