Montistrongylus giluwensis, Smales, 2011

Durette-Desset, Marie-Claude & Digiani, María Celina, 2023, Revision of the genera of Heligmonellidae (Nematoda, Heligmosomoidea), parasitic in Muridae from New Guinea, Parasite (Paris, France) 30 (63), pp. 1-34 : 12-13

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1051/parasite/2023058

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DC25665A-E218-496B-974E-B813F69395E5

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03ED87FE-FF8A-FFCA-2440-F89CFD46F89F

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Montistrongylus giluwensis
status

 

3.3.1.2 Montistrongylus giluwensis ( Figs. 3E–3 View Figure 3 H’)

3.3.1.2.1 Synlophe (based on sections from six worms, sex not specified).

Sections analyzed herein are those within proximal part of body: male ( Fig. 4 View Figure 4 /3E) and female (Fig. 14/3F) and at midbody: male ( Fig. 9 View Figure 9 /3G) and female (Fig. 16/3H); lateral cords illustrated in Figures 4 View Figure 4 /3E and 14/3F; ridges numbered in Figures 4 View Figure 4 /3E and 16/3H; careen absent.

In all sections, three ridge sets alternating with three ridge-free spaces (arrowheads).

Within proximal body: in Figure 3E View Figure 3 (male), ridge set 1 situated on left side in front of left lateral field, made up of five small ridges (3’-1, 1 and 2) similar in size; regularly spaced and oriented perpendicularly to body surface; ridge set 2 situated on right-dorsal quadrant, made up of six small ridges (3 to 8) similar in size, regularly spaced and oriented from right to left; ridge set 3 situated on ventral side, made up of seven small ridges, ridges 5’ to 7’ slightly larger than other ridges; ridges regularly spaced with ridges 5’ to 7’ oriented from right to left, other ridges oriented perpendicularly to body surface.

Figure 3F View Figure 3 (female): ridge set 1 situated on left-dorsal quadrant, made up of four small ridges similar in size, regularly spaced (with large spaces) and oriented perpendicularly to body surface; ridge set 2 situated on dorsal, right-dorsal side, made up of four small ridges, similar in size, regularly spaced (with small spaces) and oriented from right to left; ridge set 3 situated on mid-ventral side, made up of seven ridges of which the left ones slightly larger (except the last ridge one, minute), all ridges oriented from right to left.

At midbody: in Figure 3G View Figure 3 (male), ridge set 1 situated on left side, made up of five small ridges unequal in size, regularly spaced and oriented from right to left (three dorsal ridges) or perpendicularly to body surface (other two ridges); ridge set 2 situated on right-dorsal side, made up of eight small ridges oriented from right to left (three dorsal ridges) or perpendicularly to body surface (other ridges); ridge set 3 situated on mid-ventral side, made up of six small ridges, median three being slightly larger, oriented from right to left.

Figure 3H View Figure 3 (female): ridge set 1 situated on left side, made up of five ridges (3’ to 1’, 1 and 2), almost similar in size, regularly spaced, oriented perpendicularly to body surface; ridge set 2 situated on right-dorsal side, made up of six small ridges, almost similar in size, regularly spaced and oriented from right to left; ridge set 3 situated on ventral side, made up of eight small ridges (5’, 6’ largest, then 4’, 7’, 8’ then 9’ to 11’ minute) regularly spaced and oriented from right to left except ridges 9’ to 11’ oriented perpendicularly to body surface.

3.3.1.2.2 Bursa (number of worms studied not specified, illustrated in [ 33]: Figs. 10 View Figure 10 , 12 and 13). Figure 10 View Figure 10 : distal part of dorsal ray with rays 8, dorsal view; right ray 8 clearly extending beyond division of dorsal ray. Figure 12: left lobe and left proximal part of dorsal ray, dorsal view. Figure 13: right lobe and right proximal part of dorsal ray, dorsal view; right ray 8 just reaching level of division of dorsal ray. From the original written description [ 33]: bursa symmetrical with right lobe slightly larger than left one and pattern of type 2-3 in both lobes.

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