Biodiversity of anuran endoparasites from a transitional area between the Atlantic Forest and Cerrado biomes in Brazil: new records and remarks
Author
Aguiar, Aline
Laboratório de Herpetologia, Departamento de Biodiversidade, Instituto de Biociências, UNESP Rio Claro, Avenida 24 A, 1515 - Jardim Vila Bela, CEP 13506 - 900, Rio Claro, São Paulo, Brazil
Author
Morais, Drausio Honorio
Universidade Federal de Uberlândia - UFU, Instituto de Ciências Agrárias, LMG- 746, Km 1, Monte Carmelo, 38500 - 000, MG, Brazil
Author
Firmino Silva, Lidiane A.
Departamento de Parasitologia, Instituto de Biociências de Botucatu, Universidade Estadual Paulista - UNESP
Author
Anjos, Luciano Alves Dos
Departamento de Biologia e Zootecnia, Faculdade de Engenharia de Ilha Solteira, Universidade Estadual Paulista - UNESP, Passeio Monção, 226, CEP 15385 - 000, Ilha Solteira, São Paulo, Brazil
Author
Foster, Ottilie Carolina
Departamento de Parasitologia, Instituto de Biociências de Botucatu, Universidade Estadual Paulista - UNESP
Author
Silva, Reinaldo José Da
Departamento de Parasitologia, Instituto de Biociências de Botucatu, Universidade Estadual Paulista - UNESP
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-03-18
4948
1
1
41
journal article
7577
10.11646/zootaxa.4948.1.1
7af2fc34-63ae-40d2-95a6-4bed18653e7a
1175-5326
4616068
79CCDC5F-2F94-4398-B3DD-8DAC05669E9C
Clinostomum
cf.
complanatum
(
Rudolphi, 1819
)
Hosts (prevalence; range)
:
L. podicipinus
(2/225; 1–6).
Site of infection
: body cavity.
Stage
: encysted larva.
Type
host and
type
locality
:
Ardeae cinerea
Linnaeus
(bird),
Berlin
,
Europe
.
Comments
:
Clinostomum complanatum
was described as
Distoma complanatum
by Rudolphi, but there are questions concerning the precise year of publication which could be from 1809 to 1899 (
Dowset & Lubinsky 1980
).
Leidy (1856)
established the genus
Clinostomum
for adult worms found in birds from
USA
and
C. complanatum
is the
type
species (
Kanev
et al
. 2002
). Several debates concerning species of
Clinostomum
remain among researchers, especially regarding the metacercariae of
C. complanatum
and
Clinostomum marginatum
Rudolphi. These
two species have already been considered as synonymous due to their morphologic similarity (
e.g.
Baer 1933
;
Yamaguti
1933;
McAllister 1990
).
Dzikowski
et al
. (2004)
separated these species based on differences in ribosomal DNA, but the authors use specimens from
Israel
instead of those from North America.
Caffara
et al
. (2011)
integrated morphological and molecular tools such as ITS and COI sequences from specimens from North America and Europe, and they concluded that
C. complanatum
and
C. marginatum
are distinct. Both species are widely distributed and have a similar life cycle involving a bird as the definitive host and a fish or an amphibian as the second intermediate host (
Dias
et al
. 2003
;
Caffara
et al
. 2014
). Five species of
Clinostomum
(
C. complanatum
,
C. marginatum
,
Clinostomum attenuatum
Cort
,
Clinostomum hylaranae
Fischthal & Thomas
, and
Clinostomum pseudoheterostomum
Tubangui
) have been reported as metacercaria in salamanders, toads, and frogs mainly from North America; only one record in Asia, Europa, and Africa (
Calhoun
et al
. 2020
). We observed the following features of
C. complanatum
in our metacercariae: genital complex in the posterior end of the body, testes in tandem with an irregular shape, ovary displaced to lateral and smaller than ootype, cirrus sac with the same size or larger than a testis, and broad caeca (see
Caffara
et al
. 2011
,
2014
). This study contributes with the first report of a
Clinostomum
species in a South American anuran.
Calhoun
et al
. (2020)
in supplementary material present a reference, Castro-Tavernari
et al
(2009), as an anuran record for
Chile
but this reference concerns on fishes’ parasites from
Brazil
.