Renicola cerithidicola Martin, 1971

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 : 485

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.5658154

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/EF6AD377-8952-8B31-FF39-FE30FA82FB68

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Renicola cerithidicola Martin
status

 

Renicola cerithidicola Martin View in CoL

(15. Rece; Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 , 61–64 View FIGURES 61–64 )

Diagnosis: Parthenitae. Colony comprised of inactive sporocysts, densely concentrated in snail mantle (in enlarged perirectal sinus). Sporocysts translucent yellow, orange, sometimes white; ~ 500–1500 µm long, ovoid to elongate (length:width up to ~6:1), ~sausage-shaped.

Cercaria . Body mostly opaque white; non-oculate; with oral and ventral sucker; with a large Y-shaped excretory bladder, the arms of which wrap around sides of ventral sucker; body ~ 117 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: Rece is readily distinguished from the two other small renicolid cercariae (Rema [16] and Repo [17]) by its lack of an oral stylet and by the colony locus being in the mantle.

Remarks: Martin (1971) described this species based on the sporocysts, cercariae, and experimentally obtained metacercariae (he was able to get only immature adult specimens in young California gulls). Hechinger and Miura (2014) provided COI and ITS1 DNA sequence data for this species.

Specimens of this species may have been included, along with specimens of Renicola sp. “polychaetophila”, in the material Hunter (1942) used to describe her “ Cercaria cerithidia 19” ( Hechinger & Miura 2014). This species corresponds to the “Y-bladder cercaria” of Martin (1955).

Early Rece infections can be detected. The sporocysts appear to typically initially form in the basal visceral mass, as generally expected for species that infects the snail with ingested eggs ( Galaktionov & Dobrovolskij 2003) (unpublished observations).

Mature, ripe colonies comprise ~17% the soft-tissue weight of an infected snail (summer-time estimate derived from information in [ Hechinger et al. 2009]).

Rece infection causes (stolen) snail bodies to grow ~ 2x faster than uninfected snails ( Hechinger 2010).

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