Renicola

Hechinger, Ryan F., 2019, Guide to the trematodes (Platyhelminthes) that infect the California horn snail (Cerithideopsis californica: Potamididae: Gastropoda) as first intermediate host, Zootaxa 4711 (3), pp. 459-494 : 487-488

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4711.3.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:85D81C2D-0B66-4C0D-B708-AAF1DAD6018B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5658159

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/EF6AD377-8954-8B36-FF39-F954FCB9F878

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Renicola
status

 

Renicola View in CoL sp. “polychaetophila” (sensu Hechinger and Miura [2014])

(17. Repo; Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 , 71–74 View FIGURES 71–74 )

Diagnosis: Parthenitae. Colony comprised of inactive sporocysts, densely concentrated to irregularly clustered in snail gonad region, with dispersion into digestive gland. Sporocysts translucent orange to white; ~ 100–800 µm long, spheroidal to slightly elongate (length:width up to ~4:1).

Cercaria . Body mostly opaque white; non-oculate; with oral and ventral sucker; with no tegumental spines; with penetration gland duct opening arrangement of 2[(1+3+1)+1], with 3 pairs opening adjacent to oral stylet, 1 diverging to open more dorsally, 1 ventrally, with 1 separated pair forming characteristic ventral “cross ducts” posterior to oral sucker; with a large Y-shaped excretory bladder, the arms of which wrap around sides of ventral sucker; body ~ 180 µm long, ~equal in length to tail; tail simple.

Cercaria behavior: Fresh, emerged cercariae remain in water column, swim ~continuously, lashing tail back and forth.

Similar species: Repo is most readily distinguished from Rema [16] by the cercaria penetration gland duct arrangement (particularly the posterior-most “cross ducts”) and lack of tegumental spines.

Remarks: Hechinger and Miura (2014) described the sporocysts and cercariae, and provided COI and ITS1 DNA sequence data.

This species was not included in Martin (1972), but specimens of it may have been included, along with specimens of Renicola cerithidicola in the material Hunter (1942) used to describe her “ Cercaria cerithidia 19” ( Hechinger & Miura 2014). This species, along with Renicola sp. “martini” was previously referred to as “large xiphidiocercaria” in some ecological and evolutionary research (e.g., Hechinger et al. 2007; Kuris 1990).

Mature, ripe colonies comprise ~20% the soft-tissue weight of an infected snail (summer-time estimate derived from information on “lgxi” in [ Hechinger et al. 2009]).

Nadakal (1960b) presents information on the pigments of the sporocysts and cercariae of this species (likely pooled with Renicola sp. “martini”), as his “Y-bladder cercaria”.

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