Pentaloculum grahami, Bueno & Caira, 2023

Bueno, Veronica M. & Caira, Janine N., 2023, Phylogenetic relationships, host associations, and three new species of a poorly known group of “ tetraphyllidean ” tapeworms from elasmobranchs, Zootaxa 5254 (1), pp. 30-50 : 35-38

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5254.1.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6BBB57BE-DAE2-4ECC-A61F-822A02415972

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7713015

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B8C37A6D-016A-4D85-A132-C6E7E1063BC3

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:B8C37A6D-016A-4D85-A132-C6E7E1063BC3

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Pentaloculum grahami
status

sp. nov.

Pentaloculum grahami n. sp.

( Figs. 3A–E View FIGURE 3 , 4A–H View FIGURE 4 , 5 View FIGURE 5 )

ZooBank No. B8C37A6D-016A-4D85-A132-C6E7E1063BC3

Type and only known host: Parascyllium collare Ramsay and Ogilby , collared carpetshark; ( Orectolobiformes : Parascylliidae Gill ).

Type locality: Crowdy Head , New South Wales, Australia (31°50’S, 152°45’E). Site of infection: Spiral intestine. Type specimens: Holotype ( QM No. G240343 ) GoogleMaps and two paratypes (QM Nos. G240344 G240345 ); two paratypes and one SEM voucher (LRP Nos. 10947 10949 ); two paratypes ( USNM Nos. 1678892 1678893 ) . Scoleces prepared for SEM retained with JNC at the University of Connecticut.

Sequence data: KF685749 and MK321595 (hologenophores, LRP No. 8344 [KJG-17, TE-166] and LRP No. 9956 [KJG-17, JW-147]).

Etymology: This name honors fish biologist Ken Graham from the New South Wales State Fisheries and the Australian Museum who collected all specimens of Parascyillium collare examined in this study.

Provisional names: New genus 1 n. sp. of Caira et al. 2001; New genus 7 n. sp. 1 of Caira et al. 2014 and Ruhnke et al. 2015; Pentaloculum n. sp. 2 of Eudy et al. 2019.

Description. Based on one incomplete mature and six complete mature worms, and two scoleces observed with SEM.

Worms apolytic, 12.1–51.6 (28.9 ± 15.7; 6) mm long, greatest width at level of terminal proglottid; 105–174 (131 ± 29; 6) proglottids per worm. Scolex 358–460 (406 ± 38.6; 7) long by 433–593 (516.9 ± 68.9; 7) wide, consisting of four muscular sessile bothridia. Bothridia broadly ovoid, 276–405 (348.5 ± 41.3; 6; 10) long by 230– 311 (254.2 ± 23.4; 5; 9) wide; each divided into five facial loculi arranged as one single anterior loculus followed by two consecutive pairs of loculi; septum dividing anterior pair of loculi slightly offset laterally from septum diving posterior pair of loculi ( Figs. 3A View FIGURE 3 , 4A View FIGURE 4 ). Cephalic peduncle lacking.

Apex of scolex ( Fig. 4C View FIGURE 4 ) covered with gladiate spinitriches and densely packed capilliform filitriches; distal bothridial surfaces ( Fig. 4B View FIGURE 4 ) and proximal surfaces of margins of bothridia ( Fig. 4E – G View FIGURE 4 ) densely covered with long-tipped aristate gladiate spinitriches interspersed with gladiate spinitriches and capilliform filitriches; proximal surfaces away from bothridial margins ( Fig. 4H View FIGURE 4 ) densely covered with short-tipped wide aristate gladiate spinitriches, filitriches not observed; scolex proper ( Fig. 4D View FIGURE 4 ) densely covered with gladiate spinitriches interspersed with capilliform filitriches.

Proglottids craspedote. Immature proglottids 98–151 (127 ± 23.4; 6) in number, wider than long. Mature proglottids 2–11 (5.8 ± 3.8; 6) in number, wider than long ( Fig. 3B View FIGURE 3 ), 330–830 (606.1 ± 220.6; 6; 10) long by 962– 1402 (1229 ± 150.9; 6; 10) wide, length:width ratio 0.3–0.9 (0.5 ± 0.2; 6; 10):1. Gravid proglottids 1–12 (5.2 ± 3.9; 6) in number, wider than long, becoming longer than wide with maturity ( Fig. 3D View FIGURE 3 ), 954–4881 (3056.6 ± 1554.1; 6) long by 988–2512 (1407.8 ± 581; 6) wide. Genital pores marginal, irregularly alternating, 42–57% (52 ± 6; 5) of proglottid length from posterior margin in terminal-most mature proglottid.Testes30–58 (44.3± 10.5;5;6)in number, two layers deep, arranged in single field anterior to cirrus sac, oval in frontal view, 28–57 long (42.3 ± 9.7; 4; 12) by 74–123 (98 ± 15.6; 4; 12) wide. Vas deferens narrow, highly coiled, extending posteriorly to near level of ovary then anteriorly to enter cirrus sac at median margin. Cirrus sac ( Fig. 3C View FIGURE 3 ) thin-walled, narrowly obovoid, containing coiled cirrus, 149–218 (181.1 ± 21.9; 5; 9) long by 333–629 (434.2 ± 86.8; 5; 9) wide; cirrus highly expanded at base, armed with small spinitriches. Vagina thick-walled, weakly sinuous, extending from ootype along medial line of proglottid to level of cirrus sac, then crossing cirrus sac ventrally and extending along anterior margin of cirrus sac to open into genital atrium anterior to cirrus; vaginal sphincter lacking; seminal receptacle lacking. Ovary near posterior end of proglottid, with slightly lobulated margins, H-shaped in frontal view, bilobed in cross-section, 446–537 (501.9 ± 29.8; 5; 9) at widest point by 78–237 (155.5 ± 52.4; 5; 18) long. Mehlis’ gland posterior to ovarian isthmus. Vitellarium follicular; follicles in two lateral bands; each band consisting of multiple columns of follicles, extending throughout length of proglottid, not interrupted by cirrus sac or ovary, converging posterior to ovary; vitelline follicles oval, 22–38 (29.6 ± 5.7; 5; 15) long by 28–52 (38.7 ± 8.1; 5; 15) wide. Uterus medial, saccate, ventral to vagina, extending anteriorly from ovarian isthmus to mid-level of testicular field. Excretory vessels four, arranged in one dorsal and one ventral pair on each lateral margin of proglottid. Oncospheres organized in cocoons ( Fig. 5A–B View FIGURE 5 ). Cocoons spherical, containing 5–7 (6.1 ± 0.6; 1; 10) oncospheres, polar filaments lacking; oncospheres spherical, 50–81 (69.7 ± 5; 1; 10) long by 63–79 (71.6 ± 4.1; 1; 57) wide.

Remarks. Pentaloculum grahami n. sp. differs from P. macrocephalum and P. hoi in total worm length (12.08 – 51.62 vs. 8 and 1.7–3.5 mm, respectively) and total number of proglottids (105–174 vs. 23 and 16–26, respectively). It can be further distinguished from P. macrocephalum and P. hoi in that its mature proglottids are wider than long, as opposed to longer than wide, and in that the ovary is H-shaped rather than inverted A-shaped. It further differs from P. hoi in that its cocoons lack, rather than possess, bipolar filaments. It is of note that Hayden and Campbell (1981) described Zyxibothrium kamienae as possessing eggs that were contained in a membranous intrauterine tube, rather than arranged in cocoons.

QM

Australia, Queensland, South Brisbane, Queensland Museum

USNM

USA, Washington D.C., National Museum of Natural History, [formerly, United States National Museum]

QM

Queensland Museum

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

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