A review of the genus Trischistoma Cobb, 1913 (Nematoda: Enoplida), with descriptions of four new species from New Zealand
Author
Zhao, Zeng Qi
text
Zootaxa
2011
3045
1
25
journal article
46251
10.5281/zenodo.207400
951da835-db06-485c-9335-4a1ceaf9ddb9
1175-5326
207400
Genus
Trischistoma
Cobb, 1913
Description (after
Andrássy 2007
)
Body length
0.6–2.2 mm
. Very slender, often dorsally bent in posterior part. Cuticle smooth, thin, and not annulated. Six longer outer labial setae and four shorter, thinner cephalic setae well separated in two circles. Oesophagus cylindrical, strongly mucular. Stoma denticles minute. Female prodelphic, ovary reflexed, with or without post-vulval uterine sac; vulva posterior (73–83%). Tail bent dorsally, 3–7 times as long as anal body diameter, mostly more or less S-shaped. Spermatozoa fusiform, unusually large, 2.5–5.5 times as long as corresponding body diameter. Supplements none or few (1–3), restricted to pre-cloacal region.
Type
species
Trischistoma pellucidum
Cobb, 1913
Diagnosis and Relationships
This genus is characterized by having widely separated circles of outer labial and cephalic setae, a prodelphic female genital tract, vulva located far posterior, very large spermatozoa, spicules not completely surrounded by muscle layer, and with few or no supplements (
Andrássy 2006
).
Etymology
Trischistoma
is composed of the Greek words
treis
(τρεϊς) = three,
kiste
(κίστη) = a box or compartment, and
stoma
(σόμα) = the mouth.