Campydoroides manautei gen. et sp. nov. from New Caledonia and a reappraisal of the suborder Campydorina (Nematoda)
Author
Holovachov, Oleksandr
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2019
2019-04-23
518
1
23
journal article
26992
10.5852/ejt.2019.518
902380c3-f622-4107-82fc-28f5e081b3d6
2649833
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7DDF6B2E-BC13-459E-A147-6C2ADD43185C
Key to the genera of the suborder
Campydorina
(see
Table 2
for additional diagnostic characters)
1. Stoma with single well developed dorsal tooth …......................................................................…2 – Stoma with three denticles …….....................................................................................................…3
2. Stoma conoid with large tooth; cephalic sensilla and amphids posterior to labial region; caudal glands and spinneret present ………................……………….
Campydoroides
Holovachov
gen. nov.
– Stoma cylindrical with small tooth; cephalic sensilla and amphids on cap-like labial region; caudal glands and spinneret absent ........................................................................
Campydora
Cobb, 1920
3. Denticles located at different levels (dorsal and ventral in anterior and left lateral in posterior parts of stoma); female reproductive system monodelphic ……………..……. …
Udonchus
Cobb, 1913
– Denticles located at same level in anterior part of stoma; female reproductive system didelphic …..4
4. Ovaries outstretched …………........................................................................................…..…….…5 – Ovaries reflexed ….............................................................................................................................6
5. Cephalic sensilla setiform; caudal glands and spinneret present …
Rogerus
Hoeppli & Chu, 1934
– Cephalic sensilla papilliform; caudal glands and spinneret absent ….............................................. ..................................................................
Mediolaimus
Tahseen, Sultana, Khan & Hussain, 2012
6. Marine …...........................................................................................…
Syringolaimus
de Man, 1888
– Freshwater and terrestrial ………..................................................……
Rhabdolaimus
de Man, 1880