Revision of the genus Chordodes (Gordiida, Nematomorpha) from Africa-I. Ultrastructural redescription of Chordodes gariazzi Camerano, 1902, C. heinzei Sciacchitano, 1937, C. kolensis Sciacchitano, 1933, C. muelleri Sciacchitano, 1937, and C. ruandensis Sciacchitano, 1937
Author
Zanca, F.
Author
Villalobos, C. De
Author
Schmidt-Rhaesa, A.
text
Journal of Natural History
2006
2006-04-13
40
1 - 2
17
31
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222930600617898
journal article
10.1080/00222930600617898
1464-5262
5226646
DC9B239F-A883-4F55-B756-F67C0F757846
Chordodes ruandensis
Sciacchitano, 1937
(
Figure 5
)
Chordodes ruandensis
Sciacchitano 1937
, p 141
,
Figure 1
.
Holotype
:
♀
(
AMT 1427
).
Figure 5.
Chordodes ruandensis
, female. (A) Stereomicroscope, posterior end with terminal cloacal opening (arrow); (B, C) SEM: (B) cuticle of the lateral side of the body with simple areoles; (C) cuticle with crowned (2) and circumcluster (3) areoles. Scale bars: 16.6 mm (A); 10 mm (B, C).
Type locality
Republic of Rwanda
, Gabiro. Coll. Verhulst, 1934 (
Sciacchitano 1937
).
Material examined
Holotype
, SEM from midbody; LM from posterior end.
Host
Unknown.
Description
The body length is
348 mm
, diameter in the middle region is
1 mm
. The body colour is dark brown. Anterior end without white cap. The posterior end is round with a terminal cloacal opening (
Figure 5A
).
The cuticle contains
three types
of areole distributed all over the cuticle. There are numerous simple areoles with varying shape. They are rounded or oval. The surface of these areoles is rough and carries on top small bristles (
Figure 5B
). Among the simple areoles are clusters of crowned and circumcluster areoles. Crowned areoles carry long filaments (
43.7 mm
) on their apical surface and are surrounded by 16–19 circumcluster areoles. These are conical and with a ring of short bristles at the apex. In the interareolar furrow there are scarce high tubercles (
20 mm
) with rounded apex (
Figure 5B
).
Comments
Sciacchitano (1937)
described
C. ruandensis
from a female specimen but later (
Sciacchitano 1958
) referred to this specimen as a male. Taking into account that the measurements of this specimen, the collection date, and the collector’s name correspond, it is assumed that
Sciacchitano (1958)
is a repetition of
Sciacchitano’s (1937)
report. Our reinvestigation confirms that the
holotype
of
C. ruandensis
is a female (see
Figure 5A
).
Sciacchitano (1937)
described the cuticle of
C. ruandensis
with three areolar types, but the figure given is insufficient to distinguish the types properly from each other. Crowned areoles are not among the areoles described.
Sciacchitano (1958)
redescribed the cuticle, describing and producing figures of simple areoles and crowned areoles. Among the simple areoles, he distinguished a light and a dark type. From the SEM investigation, we cannot distinguish
two types
of simple areoles. The crowned areoles are clustered with circumcluster areoles. Therefore, although all three descriptions of
C. ruandensis
(
Sciacchitano 1937
,
1958
; this investigation) count
three types
of areole, these types only correspond to each other in part.