identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
6EE6D1551C525FF69CC3DD57B31A515C.text	6EE6D1551C525FF69CC3DD57B31A515C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Acanthogyrus (Acanthosentis) barbonymi Lisitsyna & Oros & Ribas & Poonlaphdecha & Barčák 2025	<div><p>Acanthogyrus (Acanthosentis) barbonymi sp. nov.</p><p>Figs 1, 2, 3</p><p>Type host.</p><p>Tinfoil barb  Barbonymus schwanenfeldii (Bleeker) ( Cypriniformes,  Cyprinidae).</p><p>Type locality.</p><p><a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=102.603836&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=17.921967" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 102.603836/lat 17.921967)">Nong Khai Inland Fisheries Research and Development Center</a>, Had Sai Thong village, Nong Khai province, Thailand (17°55.318'N, 102°36.230'E)  .</p><p>Site of infection.</p><p>Intestine.</p><p>Infection rates.</p><p>Prevalence 87.0 %, intensity 7–67.</p><p>Type material.</p><p>Deposited in the Helminthological collections of IPCAS and NHMUK (Coll. nos. IPCAS A-145 and NHMUK 2025.1.8.1-15).</p><p>Molecular data.</p><p>The sequences of nuclear 18 S rRNA (1,767 bp), 28 S rRNA (1,188 bp) and the mitochondrial COI (657 bp) genes of  Acanthogyrus (Acanthosentis) barbonymi sp. nov. were deposited in the GenBank database (Acc. nos. PQ 636375 – PQ 636378, PQ 636383 – PQ 636385, PQ 631040, PQ 631041).</p><p>Etymology.</p><p>Species name is derived from the scientific name of the host.</p><p>Morphology.</p><p>Quadrigyridae with features of genus  Acanthogyrus and subgenus  Acanthosentis . Acanthocephalans white in color, medium size, usually sickle-shaped, with maximum width in anterior third of body (Figs 1 – 3). Female larger than male. Anterior body part with two fields of tegumental spines in rings with rosette-shaped root processes (Figs 1 B, 2 A, D, E). Number of giant tegumental nuclei not constant. Proboscis small, round, armed with 18 hooks in three rows, six hooks in each row. Sensory pore in base of proboscis (Figs 1 A, B, 3 B). Hooks of the anterior row large, with simple massive roots directed posteriorly, located irregularly, three slightly anteriorly, three slightly posteriorly (Fig. 1 D). Hooks of middle row twice as small as hooks of anterior row, with complex forked roots directed anteriorly. Hooks of basal row smallest, with simple roots directed posteriorly (Fig. 1 A, D). Neck conical. Proboscis receptacle with single-layer muscular wall, with cephalic ganglion at bottom. Lemnisci almost equal in length, extending to middle of body. Genital pore terminal in both sexes (Figs 1, 2 B, C, 3 D).</p><p>Male (based on nine mature specimens with sperm, measurements of the holotype specimens followed with measurements of type series). Trunk 3.54 (2.78–4.93) mm long, 618 (585–921) wide (Fig. 1 B). Tegumental spines of anterior field with nine (9–12) rings, 16 (16–20) spines in each ring. Posterior rings of anterior field incomplete dorsally, basal ring with 2–10 spines. Length of spine blades 13 (12–16), diameter of rosette root 15 (12–16). Distance between spines fields (154–189). Somatic spines of posterior field with nine (8–10) rings, 12 (12–15) spines in each ring. Posterior rings of posterior spines field incomplete dorsally, basal ring with five or six spines. Length of spine blades 7 (7–14), diameter of rosette root 14 (12–24). Body wall with six (5–7) giant tegumental nuclei, four (2–4) dorsal, and two (1–3) ventral. Proboscis 73 (73–99) × 108 (108–138). Length of hook blades of anterior row 62–63 (51–69), middle 26 (21–26), basal 18 (18–24). Length of hook roots of anterior row 26–28 (25–45), middle 19 (16–20), basal 10 (10–15). Neck 74 (72–110) long, wide in anterior part 86 (86–105), in posterior part 126 (126–163). Proboscis receptacle 424 (370–467) × 91 (91–155). Lemnisci do not reach anterior testis, 874 (483–1,499) × 71 (44–92) and 834 (473–1,561) × 76 (44–98). Organs of reproductive system in posterior half of body. Testes oval, in tandem, anterior larger than posterior. Anterior testis 620 (429–1,078) × 399 (313–605), posterior testis 477 (378–702) × 356 (221–590). Cement gland oval, adjacent to posterior edge of posterior testis, 339 (267–575) × 302 (261–628). Almost round cement reservoir posteriorly to cement gland, 171 (121–280) × 179 (153–312). Saefftigen’s pouch club-shaped, 249 (432–621) × 82 (82–173). Vas deferens elongated, 393 (393–474) × 124 (119–124). Type specimen with leaf-shaped penis 94 × 42. Evaginated bursa 361 (335–361) × 229 (229–343).</p><p>Female (based on 13 specimens, 7 with eggs, 6 without eggs). Trunk 5.60–11.72 mm long, 0.86–1.45 mm wide. At base of caudal process 4–8 very small spines in one ring (Fig. 3 E). Tegumental spines of anterior field with 10 or 11 rings, 16–22 spines in each ring. Posterior rings of anterior field incomplete dorsally, basal ring with 8–11 spines. Length of spine blades 12–15, diameter of rosette root 15–20. Distance between spines fields 100–262. Somatic spines of posterior field with 10–12 rings, 13–17 spines in each ring. Number of spines in ring decreases towards basal ring to 3–12. Length of spine blades 10–13, diameter of rosette root 13–20. Body wall with 6–10 giant tegumental nuclei, 2–6 dorsal, 2–5 ventral. Proboscis 112–136 × 133–170 (Figs 1 A, 3 C). Length of hook blades of anterior row 59–78, middle 28–34, basal 26–27. Length of hook roots of anterior row 33–45, middle 18–31, basal 15–17. Neck 42–129 long, width of anterior part 105–124, width of posterior part 166–320. Proboscis receptacle 361–560 × 124–147. Lemnisci 1.29–1.54 mm long, 83–154 wide. Female reproductive tract in posterior part of body, 962–1,400 long. Vagina with two sphincters (Fig. 1 C, E). Eggs fusiform, elongate, no polar prolongation of fertilization membrane, 21–24 × 8–10 (Fig. 2 F). Posterior end of female forms somewhat pronounced dome-shaped process, 180–343 × 198–356 (Fig. 3 D) with complete or incomplete ring of 4–8 small spines at its base. At the moment of copulation, the male’s bursa embraces the dome-shaped caudal process of the female (Fig. 2 C), and the eggs are injected into the cavity of the male bursa. After copulation, the bursa invaginates and some of the eggs may temporarily remain in cavity of bursa (Fig. 2 B).</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>To date, 57 species have been described in the subgenus  Acanthosentis of the genus  Acanthogyrus, mainly parasites of freshwater fish in South and Southeast Asia (Amin 2005, 2013; Naidu 2012; Saxena et al. 2013; Amin et al. 2017; Mohd-Agos et al. 2021; Rana and Kaur 2023).  Acanthogyrus (Acanthosentis) barbonymi sp. nov. differs from most species of the subgenus in the arrangement of rings of tegumental spines in two fields with a more or less pronounced distance between them, as well as the presence of a dome-shaped process with a ring of tiny spines at the base at the posterior end of the females. The arrangement of spines in two fields is characteristic for two species of the subgenus  Acanthosentis,  A. (A.) multispinus (Wang, 1966), described from the silver carp  Hypophthalmichthys molitrix (Valenciennes) from China (Wang 1966) and  A. (A.) bispinosa Rana &amp; Kaur, 2023 from the mrigal carp  Cirrhinus mrigala Hamilton and the orangefin labeo  Labeo calbasu Hamilton in Malaysia. However,  A. (A.) barbonymi sp. nov. differs from  A. (A.) multispinus in two characteristics: i) posterior rings of tegumental spines of  A. (A.) barbonymi sp. nov. are incomplete in both fields, and the rings of the posterior field do not extend to the middle of the body; while the rings of spines in both fields of  A. (A.) multispinus are complete and the rings of the posterior field of spines reach the posterior end of the body; ii) the proboscis hooks of the middle row  A. (A.) barbonymi sp. nov. are half the size of the hooks of the apical row; while in  A. (A.) multispinus, the size of the proboscis hooks gradually decreases from the apical to the basal row.  A. (A.) barbonymi sp. nov. differs from  A. (A.) bispinosa in the number of rings of spines, with 9–12 rings of spines in the anterior field, 8–11 rings of spines in the posterior field versus 7–10 rings of anterior spines and 23–38 rings of posterior spines in  A. (A.) bispinosa (Rana and Kaur 2023) .</p><p>One species of the subgenus  Acanthosentis,  A. (A.) siamensis (Farooqi &amp; Sirikanchana, 1987) Amin, 2005, has been found in the silver barb  Barbonymus gonionotus (Bleeker) (=  Puntius gonionotus) in Thailand (Farooqi and Sirikanchana 1987).  Acanthogyrus (A.) barbonymi sp. nov. and  A. (A.) siamensis have similarities in the size of the proboscis hooks and the shape of the female caudal process; however, they differ in the number of rings of body spines: 20–26 in  A. (A.) barbonymi sp. nov. vs 3–4 in  A. (A.) siamensis .</p><p>Recently, Mohd-Agos et al. (2021) described three new species of the subgenus  Acanthosentis from  Barbonymus schwanenfeldii from Lake Kenyir in Malaysia, namely  A. (A.) kenyirensis Mohd-Agos, Mohd-Husin, Zakariah, Yusoff, Wahab, Jones, Hassan, 2021,  A. (A.) tembatensis Mohd-Agos, Mohd-Husin, Zakariah, Yusoff, Wahab, Jones, Hassan, 2021 and  A. (A.) terengganuensis Mohd-Agos, Mohd-Husin, Zakariah, Yusoff, Wahab, Jones, Hassan, 2021 . Although described from the same fish host,  A. (A.) barbonymi sp. nov. differs from these three species in the size of the proboscis hooks, and the hooks of the middle and basal rows of  A. (A.) barbonymi sp. nov. have similar lengths and are approximately half as long as the hooks of the anterior row, whereas in  A. (A.) kenyirensis,  A. (A.) tembatensis, and  A. (A.) terengganuensis the hooks of the anterior and middle rows are of comparable length and more than twice as long as the hooks of the basal row. Additionally,  A. (A.) barbonymi sp. nov. clearly differs from them in other morphological characters: i)  A. (A.) barbonymi sp. nov. has 4–11 giant nuclei in the tegument whereas  A. (A.) kenyirensis and  A. (A.) terengganuensis have no giant nuclei in the tegument; ii) the tegumental spines of  A. (A.) barbonymi sp. nov. form two fields, with 9–12 rings of spines in the anterior field and 8–11 rings of spines in the posterior field whereas tegumental spines in  A. (A.) kenyirensis and  A. (A.) tembatensis are in one field with eight or nine rings; iii)  A. (A.) kenyirensis,  A. (A.) tembatensis, and  A. (A.) terengganuensis have a unique collar ring on the neck and a muscular-like structure on both sides of proboscis attached to the ring whereas this structure absent in  A. (A.) barbonymi sp. nov.; iv) females of  A. (A.) barbonymi sp. nov. have a caudal process with tiny spines in one ring at its base whereas details of the caudal process in females of the three species from Malaysia were not mentioned. These morphological differences suggest that  A. (A.) barbonymi sp. nov. is not conspecific with  A. (A.) kenyirensis,  A. (A.) tembatensis, nor  A. (A.) terengganuensis .</p><p>Mohd-Agos et al. (2021) generated a sequence of ITS region from each of the three Malayan species (MK 184204, MK 184205, MK 069588; 589–813 bp); a single COI sequence of  A. (A.) kenyirensis (MN 833316; 633 bp) was submitted to the GenBank by these authors, but this was not included in their work. COI sequences of our hologenophore specimens were almost identical (99.0 % pairwise similarity) with the unpublished sequence of  A. (A.) kenyirensis . The ITS marker could not be used for reliable phylogenetic analysis because we were unable to generate sequences of sufficient length. However, comparison of short (131 bp long) ITS sequences of our three hologenophores showed the highest pairwise similarity of  A. (A.) barbonymi sp. nov. with  A. (A.) terengganuensis (95.8 %), followed by  A. (A.) kenyirensis (89.2 %) and  A. (A.) tembatensis (83.2 %). Since the analyses of ITS and COI markers provided inconsistent results, this could indicate misidentification of the specimens from Malaysia used for genotyping.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6EE6D1551C525FF69CC3DD57B31A515C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Lisitsyna, Olga;Oros, Mikuláš;Ribas, Alexis;Poonlaphdecha, Srisupaph;Barčák, Daniel	Lisitsyna, Olga, Oros, Mikuláš, Ribas, Alexis, Poonlaphdecha, Srisupaph, Barčák, Daniel (2025): Acanthocephalans from freshwater fishes in northeast Thailand with the description of a new species of the subgenus Acanthosentis Verma & Dutta, 1929 (Acanthocephala, Quadrigyridae). ZooKeys 1233: 325-348, DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.1233.136533
36639A5209925E778B459CFAB236FCE1.text	36639A5209925E778B459CFAB236FCE1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Pallisentis rexus Wongkham & Whitfield 1999	<div><p>Pallisentis rexus Wongkham &amp; Whitfield, 1999</p><p>Figs 4, 5</p><p>Host.</p><p>Striped snakehead  Channa striata (Bloch) (Anabantiformes,  Channidae).</p><p>Locality.</p><p><a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=102.76318&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=17.451084" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 102.76318/lat 17.451084)">Nong Samrong Lake</a>, Nong Samrong Town, Udon Thani province, Thailand (17°27.065'N, 102°45.791'E)  and a <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=102.58685&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=17.903166" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 102.58685/lat 17.903166)">fish farm in Kong Nang village</a>, Tha Bo Town, Nong Khai province, Thailand (17°54.190'N, 102°35.211'E)  .</p><p>Site of infection.</p><p>Intestine.</p><p>Infection rates.</p><p>Prevalence 84.9 %, intensity 1–35.</p><p>Molecular data.</p><p>The nuclear 18 S rRNA (1,735 bp), 28 S rRNA (1,085 bp), ITS (774 bp) and the mitochondrial COI (623 bp) genes sequences of  Pallisentis rexus were deposited in the GenBank database (Acc. nos. PQ 636379 – PQ 636381, PQ 636386 – PQ 636388, PQ 636390, PQ 636391, PQ 631042 – PQ 631044).</p><p>Morphology</p><p>(based on 5 males, 7 females). Medium-sized, white acanthocephalans. Anterior part of trunk with two fields of spines in rings (Figs 4 A, 5 A). Distance between anterior and posterior fields 105–151. Proboscis length less than its width (Fig. 4 A). Proboscis with four rows of hooks, 12 hooks in each row. Hooks size decreases from apical to basal row. Proboscis receptacle with single-layer muscular wall, with cephalic ganglion in middle part. Neck conical. Lemnisci longer than proboscis receptacle. Gonopore terminal in both sexes.</p><p>Male. Trunk 4.03–7.3 mm long, 389–446 wide. Tegumental spines of anterior field with 14 rings, 14–18 spines in each. Length of spines 27–31 (Fig. 4 C). Somatic spines of posterior field in 20–32 rings, anterior rings complete, ten spines in each, posterior rings incomplete, 2–4 in each. Length of spines 27–38 (Fig. 4 D). Proboscis 164–214 × 253–289 (Figs 4 A, 5 B). Length of hook blades of anterior row 69–81, second 59–69, third 38–42, basal 25–33. Length of hook roots of anterior row 47–58, second 39–44, third 30–49, basal 19–25. Proboscis receptacle 419–594 × 98–160. Neck 164–186 long. Lemnisci 921–1,359 × 70–98. Organs of reproductive systems in posterior half of trunk (Fig. 4 B). Testes I 575–695 × 172–200, II 636–654 × 125–198. Single cement gland 1,079 × 115–183, cement reservoir 121–432 × 153–200. Saefftigen’s pouch club-shaped, 307–478 × 115–125.</p><p>Female. Trunk 10.00– 12.55 mm long, 264–405 wide. Tegumental spines of anterior field with 12–15 rings, anterior rings complete, 14–20 spines in each, posterior rings incomplete dorsally, 6–14 in each. Length of spines 25–34. Somatic spines of posterior field with 40–47 rings, ten spines in anterior rings, 3–11 in posterior rings. Length of spines 39–48. Proboscis 110–216 × 206–319. Length of hook blades of anterior row 74–85, second 63–74, third 45–52, basal 31–39. Length of hook roots of anterior row 48–67, second 43–65, third 35–46, basal 27–29. Proboscis receptacle 520–760 × 105–166. Neck 184–275 long. Lemnisci 1,094 –1,115 × 55–72. Reproductive tract 398–531. Egg fusiform, elongate, no polar prolongation of fertilization membrane, 92–102 × 42–53 (Fig. 4 E).</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>Pallisentis rexus ( Eoacanthocephala,  Quadrigyridae) was described from the striped snakehead  Channa striata (Bloch) in the Chiang Mai Basin in Thailand (Wongkham; Whitfield, 1999). Later, immature specimens of this species were found in the Asian swamp eel,  Monopterus albus (Zieuw) from Bangkok, Thailand (Amin; Taraschewski 2003). Adult  P. rexus were also found in  Channa sр. from a river in northern Taiwan (Lisitsyna et al. 2023).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/36639A5209925E778B459CFAB236FCE1	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Lisitsyna, Olga;Oros, Mikuláš;Ribas, Alexis;Poonlaphdecha, Srisupaph;Barčák, Daniel	Lisitsyna, Olga, Oros, Mikuláš, Ribas, Alexis, Poonlaphdecha, Srisupaph, Barčák, Daniel (2025): Acanthocephalans from freshwater fishes in northeast Thailand with the description of a new species of the subgenus Acanthosentis Verma & Dutta, 1929 (Acanthocephala, Quadrigyridae). ZooKeys 1233: 325-348, DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.1233.136533
