Parapalus, Loof and Zullini, 2000

Peña-Santiago, Reyes, Liébanas, Gracia & Ahmad, Wasim, 2014, Taxonomy of the genus Oriverutus Siddiqi, 1971 (Nematoda: Dorylaimida: Nordiidae), Journal of Natural History 48 (21), pp. 1253-1278 : 1266

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2013.861942

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4332019

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E3B669-FFA3-AE4D-FF7F-F9E973F081C7

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Parapalus
status

 

Parapalus

When proposing this genus, with Parapalus arboricola from Costa Rica as its only and type species, Loof and Zullini (2000) classified it under Qudsianematidae , Paraxonchiinae due to its neck strongly tapering forwards, the lip region becoming (p. 609) “less than 25% of body diam. at base of pharynx”. Parapalus was not compared with Oriverutus and its closest genera. The taxonomy of paraxonchiid taxa suffered some changes during the next decade (cf. Baniyamuddin et al. 2010), but the concept and status of Parapalus remained invariable. The re-examination of type material of Parapalus arboricola has revealed ( Figure 10 View Figure 10 ) that the general morphology of this taxon resembles in many aspects to that of Oriverutus (lip region visible expanded, odontostyle longer than lip region, conical tail with a weak dorsal concavity), but also confirmed that the neck region strongly tapers towards the anterior end, with very narrow lip region ( Figure 10A–C View Figure 10 ), a remarkable feature indeed. Besides, lips are separated but probably not lobelike ( Figure 10D–F View Figure 10 ), odontostyle is relatively robust, and the pharyngo-intestinal junction lacks gland cells but the cardia is distinctly asymmetrical ( Figure 10G View Figure 10 ), all these features being unusual but not unknown in Oriverutus species. Parapalus arboricola might represent an extreme case within the potential variability of the genus Oriverutus , but, taking into account that the strong tapering of the neck region is a relevant qualitative apomorphic state, not described in Oriverutus , Parapalus is accepted as a valid genus, provisionally distinguishable from Oriverutus .

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