Five new species of Acanthobothrium van Beneden, 1849 (Cestoda: Tetraphyllidea) in elasmobranchs from the northwest Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico with first records from smooth-hound sharks and guitarfish
Author
Vardo-Zalik, Anne M.
Author
Campbell, Ronald A.
text
Zootaxa
2011
2838
41
64
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.206009
dcfda945-f761-4ebf-890b-5cdabc3ecb45
1175-5326
206009
Acanthobothrium lentiginosum
sp. nov.
(
Figs. 9–13
)
Specimens deposited:
holotype
(USNPC 103815);
paratypes
(USNPC 103816–103819).
Host:
Rhinobatos lentiginosus
Garman
, 1880
; Atlantic guitarfish;
Rajiformes
:
Rhinobatidae
.
Type
Locality:
Gulf of
Mexico
at
26 16.11’N
,
97 8.05’W
at 9 fathoms
15.x.94
, coll. R. A. Campbell.
Site of Infection:
spiral intestine.
Prevalence:
1 of 1 individual examined.
Etymology:
This species is named after its host,
Rhinobatos lentiginosus
.
Description:
Based upon measurements of 5 whole mounted specimens and 2 with SEM. Small worms
2–3.1 mm
(3, n=5) long composed of 5–7 (6, n=5) segments; strobila acraspedote, euapolytic. Scolex proper 288–474 (347, n=5) long by 168–304 (227, n=5) wide, composed of 4 triloculate bothridia. Bothridia, 272–474 (347, n=8) long by 85–140 (111, n=8) wide; mean (BL: BW) 2.7:1. Each of 4 bothridia free at posterior end, acuminate, covered with spinitriches over proximal surfaces and divided into three loculi by muscular septa. Anterior loculus 100– 235 (168, n=11) long, middle loculus 45–90 (58, n=11) long, posterior loculus 45–95 (65, n=11) long; (A: M: P) 1:0.35:0.39. Apical pad 30–50 (40, n=6) long by 65–120 (88, n=6) wide, bearing a single accessory sucker, 10–20 (14, n=8) long by 20–40 (29, n=8) wide. Cephalic peduncle 288–456 (373, n=5) long by 52–80 (65, n=5) wide covered with spinitriches; (BL: CPL) 1: 1.2–1.6.
Hook dimensions: Hooks of similar shape; handle and prongs about equal in length. Lateral hook (n=6): A = 35–40 (38); B= 60–100 (82); C= 80–110 (88); D= 90–135 (114); E= 110–150 (125); W= 30–40 (38). Medial hook (n=6): A’= 30–40 (33); B’= 75–110 (87); C’= 65–100 (88); D’=100–140 (118); E’= 95–140 (123); W’= 40–60 (45). (THL: BL) 1:2.7 to 1:2.8.
Strobila: Immature segments, 2–6 (4, n=5) per worm wider than long becoming longer than wide with maturity. Mature segments, 350–570 (483, n=3) long by 135–200 (165, n=3) wide, 1 (1, n=4) per worm. Genital pore opening on lateral margin, 59–69% (63, n=3) from posterior end of the segment; genital atrium shallow. Cirrus sac near middle of segment, subspherical in mature segments, 60–164 (142, n=5) long by 50–108 (85, n=5) wide, containing coiled cirrus; cirrus armed with microtriches. Testes arranged in two, single layered columns extending between ovarian lobes near ovarian isthmus to near anterior extremity of segment. Testes 22–29 (26, n=3) in number, 5–7 (6, n=3) preporal, 10–13 (12, n=3) aporal, 4–6 (5, n=3) postporal; subspherical 30–50 (37, n=10) long by 25–40 (33, n=10) wide. Vas deferens anteromedian, sinuous, enters cirrus sac at adnate pole. Ovary posterior, inverted -A shaped in frontal view (
Fig. 12
), 192–418 (272, n=3) long, by 104–152 (132, n=3) wide, bilobed in cross-section, lobes approximately equal in length, extending c. 75% distance to cirrus sac from posterior end of segment; ovarian isthmus well posterior. Mehlis’ gland and ootype small, elongated, c. 15–27 long by 10–23 wide, located immediately posterior to ovarian isthmus. Vagina thick-walled, ascends along midline as sinuous tube from ootype to cirrus sac, then laterally along anterior border of cirrus sac to enter genital atrium; seminal receptacle, c.
15 in
diameter, at level of ovarian isthmus; vaginal sphincter absent. Vitellarium in 2 lateral follicular columns, each column 1–2 follicles deep, extending from just posterior to ovarian isthmus to level of the most anterior testes; interrupted by cirrus sac and vagina on poral side. Uterus median, tubular, extending from ootype to near anterior extremity of segment. Excretory ducts lateral.
Remarks:
Acanthobothrium lentiginosum
from
R. lentiginosus
is a category 1 species (SFFS) and possesses ovarian lobes of approximately equal length that reach about 75% of the distance from the posterior end of the segment to the level of the cirrus sac (
Goshroy & Caira 2001
). This is the first species of
Acanthobothrium
described from a guitarfish (
Rhinobatidae
) in the Atlantic Ocean and only the fifth species of
Acanthobothrium
reported from the genus
Rhinobatos
worldwide.
Fyler and Caira (2004)
reported finding
Acanthobothrium
in two species of guitarfish from
Senegal
but did not describe them. The Atlantic guitarfish,
R. lentiginosus
, is found along the east coast of North
America
and the Gulf of
Mexico
in coastal waters and in
Cuba
(
Robins & Ray 1986
;
Froese & Pauly 2010
). Other species of
Acanthobothrium
described from rhinobatids are:
Acanthobothrium olseni
Dailey & Mudrey, 1968
,
Acanthobothrium rhinobati
Alexander, 1953
and
Acanthobothrium robustum
Alexander, 1953
all from
Rhinobatos productus
(Ayres)
;
Acanthobothrium satyanarayanaroi
Sarada, Lakshmi & Rao,
1993
in
Glaucostegus granulatus
(Cuvier)
; and
Acanthobothrium southwelli
Subhapradha,
1955
in
Rhinobatos schlegelii
Müller & Henle.
Acanthobothrium lentiginosum
can be differentiated from all of these species using the original descriptions and categorical system of Ghoshroy & Caira (2001) as follows:
A. olseni
belongs to category
2 in
having an asymmetrical ovary, and
A. lentiginosum
possesses fewer testes (22–29 vs. 26–39) and a shorter cephalic peduncle (288–456 vs. 667);
A. rhinobati
fits categories 9(5) due to the variable number of segments and a symmetrical ovary and is different from
A. lentiginosum
by larger overall size (
32mm
. vs.
2–3 mm
) and greater numbers of segments (50 vs. 5–7) and testes (51–62 vs.22–29);
A. robustum
is designated a category 4 species by possessing a symmetrical ovary, and differs in possession of 2 accessory suckers per bothridium and an accessory spur on each outer hook prong;
A. satyanarayanaroi
is a much larger worm (
9–15 cm
vs.
2–3 mm
) with many segments and testes (80–90 vs. 22–29); and finally,
A. lentiginosum
differs from
A. southwelli
in the absence of postovarian testes, total number of testes (22–29 vs. 34) and number of postporal testes (4–6 vs. 13).
Acanthobothrium lentiginosum
differs from other category 1 species in the western Atlantic in the following ways: from
Acanthobothrium fogeli
Goldstein, 1964
by the presence of postporal testes and fewer testes in total (22–29 vs. 36–54); it differs from
Acanthobothrium himanturi
Brooks, 1977
by its smaller size (
2–3mm
vs.>
3.8 mm
long), fewer segments (5–7 vs. 17–26) and fewer testes (22–29 vs. 38–57);
A. lentiginosum
lacks a vaginal sphincter and has a more anterior genital pore (59–69% vs. 50%) than
A. lineatum
; it differs from
A. lintoni
in possessing fewer segments (5–7 vs. ave. 23), and fewer total testes (22–29 vs. 30–46); it possesses fewer aporal testes (10–13 vs. 17–34) and shorter ovarian lobes (192–418 vs. 620–676) than
A. paulum
; and
A. lentiginosum
is smaller (
2–3 mm
vs.
4.79–8.44 mm
) and has fewer segments (5–7 vs. 18–30) than
A. marplatense
Ivanov & Campbell, 1998
.
In the eastern North Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea
A. lentiginosum
closely resembles
A. minus
Tazerouti, Kechemir-Issad & Euzet, 2009
from
Raja asterias
Delaroche
from
Algeria
and
Acanthobothrium mathiasi
Euzet,
1959
in
Mustelus mustelus
(Linnaeus)
and
M. canis
from the Mediterranean Sea.
Acanthobothrium lentiginosum
differs from
A. minu
s in numerous characters including the distribution of testes (preovarian testes vs. between ovarian lobes), ovarian symmetry and extent of ovarian lobes (75% of distance to cirrus sac vs. beyond level of cirrus sac). It differs from
A. mathiasi
in possessing a shorter total hook length (100–140 vs. 155–200) and fewer testes per segment (22–29 vs. 26–43). Other small species of
Acanthobothrium
from the eastern North Atlantic that have been reported from various hosts including rhinobatids and are <
5mm
total length, have similar scolex morphology and hook form and have <30 testes are:
Acanthobothrium dujardinii
van
Beneden, 1849
,
Acanthobothrium edwardsi
Williams, 1969
from
Raja
(
Leucoraja
)
fullonica
Linnaeus
,
Acanthobothrium quadripartitum
Williams, 1968
from
Raja naevus
Montagu
and
Acanthobothrium tripartitum
Williams, 1969
. Despite the numerous hosts and disparate localities reported for
A. dujardinii
discussed by
Williams (1969)
it is distinct from
A. lentiginosum
in the possession of marginal lappets on the bothridia, as is
A. edwardsi
(see illustrations of
Williams (1969)
;
Figs. 21
, 39,47), which also differs in having ovarian lobes that extend to the cirrus sac.
Acanthobothrium lentiginosum
differs from
A. quadripartitum
in number of testes (22–29 vs. 18), locular ratio and total hook length (90–140 vs. 80–90) and from
A. tripartitum
in testis number (22–29 vs. 13–16) and ovarian symmetry and form where the lobes do not reach or exceed the level of the cirrus sac as they do in
A. tripartitum
.
Acanthobothrium lentiginosum
can be differentiated from category 1 species from the eastern Pacific as follows: it has a smaller anterior loculus (100–235 vs. 272–310), and shorter medial and lateral total hook lengths (100–140, 90–135 vs. 163–166, 193–195) than
Acanthobothrium atahualpai
Marques, Brooks & Barriga, 1997
; it possesses fewer testes than
Acanthobothrium dollyae
Caira & Burge, 2001
(22–29 vs. 42–55); it possesses more testes (22–29 vs. 6–10) and has a more anterior genital pore (58–69% vs. 10–37%) than
Acanthobothrium minisculum
Marques, Brooks & Barriga, 1997
; it is shorter than
Acanthobothrium monski
Marques, Brooks & Barriga, 1997
(2–3 vs.
3.4–7.6 mm
) and possesses fewer segments (5–7 vs. 24–48);
A. lentiginosum
has fewer segments (
5–7 v. 13
–19) and lacks the vaginal sphincter and protruding genital pore of
A. nicoyaense
; and it has fewer segments than
Acanthobothrium royi
Caira & Burge, 2001
(5–7 vs. 19–26).
FIGURES 9–13
.
Acanthobothrium lentiginosum
sp. nov.
from the Atlantic guitarfish.
9
. Scolex.
10
. Hooks.
11
. Mature segment. Note posterior extent of testes.
12
. Detail of bilobed ovary, inverted A-shaped.
13.
Entire worm. Scale bars:
Figs. 9, 11, 13
= 100 µm.
Figs. 10, 12
= 50 µm.
In the Indo-Pacific region
A. lentiginosum
can be differentiated from five category 1 species by the absence of postovarian testes (
Acanthobothrium foulki
Reyda& Caira, 2006
;
Acanthobothrium marymichaelorum
Twohig, Caira & Fyler, 2008
;
Acanthobothrium larsoni
Reyda &Caira, 2006
;
Acanthobothrium saliki
Fyler & Caira, 2006
; and
A. southwelli
). It lacks the weak horizontal band of musculature running across the posterior loculi of
Acanthobothrium asnihae
Fyler & Caira, 2006
and
Acanthobothrium gnomus
Reyda & Caira, 2006
and it has fewer testes (22–29 vs. 44–45) than
Acanthobothrium guptai
Shinde & Bhagwan, 2002
.
Acanthobothrium lentiginosum
has fewer segments than
A. zainali
Fyler & Caira, 2006
(5–7 vs. 19–26)
In the waters of
Australia
, numerous species belonging to category 1 have been described by
Campbell and Beveridge (2002)
,
Fyler & Caira (2006)
and
Fyler
et al.
(2009)
. A
canthobothrium
lentiginosum
differs from each of these as follows: from
Acanthobothrium bartonae
Campbell & Beveridge, 2002
by bothridial shape (acuminate vs. rounded), and longer abaxial prongs (65–100/80–100 vs. 54–67/61– 65); it possesses fewer testes than
Acanthobothrium clarkae
Campbell & Beveridge, 2002
,
Acanthobothrium laurenbrownae
Campbell & Beveridge, 2002
,
Acanthobothrium urolophi
Schmidt, 1973
, and
Acanthobothrium pearsoni
Williams, 1962
(22–29 vs. 45–52, 31– 46, 34–41, 56–60 respectively) but has more testes than
Acanthobothrium martini
Campbell & Beveridge, 2002
,
Acanthobothrium stevensi
Campbell and Beveridge, 2002
and
Acanthobothrium thomasae
Campbell and Beveridge, 2002
(22–29 vs. 8–11, 14–18, 12–18 respectively); it lacks the vaginal sphincter and short cephalic peduncle (288–456 vs. 25–150) of
Acanthobothrium mooreae
Campbell & Beveridge, 2002
; it lacks the very long microtriches on the cephalic peduncle and has fewer postporal testes (4–6 vs. 7–12) than
Acanthobothrium odonoghuei
Campbell &Beveridge, 2002
; it possesses longer bothridia (240–430 vs. 170–228) and longer medial hook prongs (50–75 vs. 34–59) than
Acanthobothrium rohdei
Campbell & Beveridge, 2002
; it has more postporal testes (4–6 vs. 0–2), fewer segments (5–7 vs. 16–23) and longer lateral abaxial hook lengths (80–110 vs. 65–75) than
Acanthobothrium romanowi
Fyler, Caira & Jensen, 2009
; it has fewer segments (5–7 vs. 9–13) and smaller suckers (10–20 vs. 35–53) than
Acanthobothrium oceanharvestae
Fyler, Caira & Jensen, 2009
; and it is distinct from
Acanthobothrium zimmeri
Fyler, Caira & Jensen,
2009
in having more postporal testes (4–6 vs. 1–2) and in lacking testes posterior to the ovarian isthmus (0 vs. 2–6).