Microphallus
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.210378 |
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6166273 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A872878D-FFF1-FFE2-FF73-3B37FBE3FE5C |
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Plazi |
scientific name |
Microphallus |
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Microphallus View in CoL sp. "poulini"
(14. Mipo; Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 , 25–27 View FIGURES 25 – 27 )
Stages: sporocysts (daughter) and cercariae
Host: Potamopyrgus antipodarum
Site in host: Sporocysts in gonad, digestive gland, basal visceral mass, and mantle
Voucher localities: Waimakariri River, South Island (-43.4148o lat, 172.6517o long); Opihi River, South Island (-44.1682o lat, 170.9422o long); Sutton Stream, South Island (-45.5971o lat, 170.0949o long)
Prevalence: 2% (n = 100) at Waimakariri; 2% (n = 100) at Opihi; 0.06% (n = 160) at Sutton
Specimens deposited: USNPC #s: 105688-105690
Diagnosis: Sporocyst translucent, globose to oblong (2:1 length:width). Length ~400–500. Developing cercariae number up to over 20.
Cercaria non-oculate with simple tail, no ventral sucker, prominent penetration glands, and oral stylet. Body length ~90–130. Tail length 1/2 to 1 times body length. Penetration glands post-equatorially in the third fourth of body. Stylet length ~12. Penetration glands can extrude contents into the gland ducts that become inflated anteriorly, resulting in gland bodies being less apparent. Penetration glands in many cercariae often opaque brown, in smaller, compact cluster just post-equator. In some infections, unusual cercariae occur alongside the normal cercariae: they are immobile, larger (length up to 180), elliptical, with the smaller, rounded, opaque, brown penetration glands, and appear to lack tail. I do not know whether this represents ontogenetic variation, dead cercariae, or something else.
Remarks: The “normal” cercariae from some infections are consistently under 100 microns long, while those from others appear to typically be around 130. This may represent intraspecific variation or the existence of multiple microphallid species.
This species appears to have not been included in Winterbourn (1974). However, explaining my working name, it is the “ Microphallus sp.” that has been the subject of several investigations out of Dr. Robert Poulin’s research group at Otago University, Dunedin, South Island. This work has focused on metacercariae, particularly their impacts on second intermediate hosts, which are copepods and amphipods (e.g., Coats et al. 2010; Hansen & Poulin 2005; Rauque et al. 2011). Please consult the literature for additional research.
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.
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