Rockacestus carvajali, Caira & Bueno & Jensen, 2021

Caira, Janine N., Bueno, Veronica & Jensen, Kirsten, 2021, Emerging global novelty in phyllobothriidean tapeworms (Cestoda: Phyllobothriidea) from sharks and skates (Elasmobranchii), Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 193, pp. 1336-1363 : 1354-1357

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa185

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2EBC6EC1-1B97-45FF-AC54-5FA54679A3DE

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5753534

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C1BE31F7-1E16-4A24-920B-E42B5796066E

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:C1BE31F7-1E16-4A24-920B-E42B5796066E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Rockacestus carvajali
status

sp. nov.

ROCKACESTUS CARVAJALI View in CoL SP. NOV.

( FIGS 7 View Figure 7 , 8A–E View Figure 8 )

ZooBank registration: C1BE31F7-1E16-4A24-920B- E42B5796066E.

Description (Based on two whole mature worms, three whole immature worms, and three scolices examined with SEM.) Worms euapolytic, craspedote, 13.1–14.5 mm long; proglottids 75–81 in total number; maximum width at level of scolex. Scolex consisting of four bothridia, 546–903 (774 ± 165; 4) long, 900– 1146 (1049 ± 104; 5) wide. Bothridia folded ( Figs 7A View Figure 7 , 8A View Figure 8 ), with apical sucker and single loculus, 406–648 (509 ± 104; 4; 7) long, 378–753 (552 ± 134; 4; 7) wide when folded, sessile anteriorly, free posteriorly; loculus with marginal loculi and posterior depression bounded by circular band of muscle fibres ( Fig. 7B View Figure 7 ); apical sucker 84–155 (118 ± 21; 5; 15) long, 85–154 (116 ± 21; 5; 16) wide; posterior depression 126–214 (156 ± 36; 3; 7) long, 132–199 (165 ± 30; 3; 7) wide. Cephalic peduncle lacking. Neck 5.2–6.7 mm long. Distal surface of apical sucker and anterior portions of loculus with papilliform filitriches ( Fig. 8B View Figure 8 ); distal surface of posterior depression with lingulate spinitriches and papilliform filitriches ( Fig. 8C View Figure 8 ). Proximal bothridial surface with papilliform filitriches ( Fig. 8D View Figure 8 ). Neck ( Fig. 8E View Figure 8 ) and strobila with capilliform filitriches arranged in wide scutes. Immature proglottids wider than long, becoming longer than wide with maturity, 71–76 in number ( Fig. 7C View Figure 7 ). Mature proglottids wider than long ( Fig. 7D View Figure 7 ), becoming longer than wide posteriorly ( Fig. 7E View Figure 7 ), four or five in number. Terminal proglottid 1143–1424 long, 537–540 wide, length-to-width ratio 2.1–2.6:1. Testes 46–55 (50 ± 4; 4; 4) in total number, nine to 12 (10 ± 1; 4; 4) in number in post-poral field, 38–53 (47 ± 5; 2; 6) long, 64–83 (74 ± 8; 2; 6) wide. Vas deferens coiled medial to cirrus sac. Cirrus sac oval, 302 long, 132 wide, thin walled, containing coiled cirrus; cirrus armed with spinitriches. Genital pores irregularly alternating, 73–79% of proglottid length from posterior end; genital atrium shallow. Vagina weakly sinuous, extending from ootype along midline of proglottid to anterior margin of cirrus sac, then laterally along anterior margin of cirrus sac to open into common genital atrium anterior to cirrus. Ovary at or near posterior margin of proglottid, H-shaped in frontal view, 344–406 long, 182–252 (217 ± 50; 4) wide, tetralobed in cross-section; ovarian margins lobulate. Vitellarium follicular; follicles arranged in two lateral bands that converge medially; each band consisting of multiple columns of follicles, extending throughout length of proglottid, partly or fully interrupted by terminal genitalia, uninterrupted by ovary; follicles highly variable in form. Excretory vessels 4, arranged in one dorsal and one ventral pair on each lateral margin of proglottid. Gravid proglottids not observed.

Type host: Yellownose skate, Dipturus chilensis (Guichenot, 1848) ( Rajiformes : Rajidae de Blainville ).

Type locality: Pacific Ocean off Puñihuil on the island of Chiloé, Chile (41°55′43″S, 74°02′16″W) GoogleMaps .

Additional locality: Pacific Ocean off Niebla, Los Rios, Chile (39°51′S, 73°24′W) GoogleMaps .

Site of infection: Spiral intestine.

Type material: Holotype (mature worm, MNHNCL no. PLAT-15023); two paratypes (one mature worm, USNM no. 1638652; one immature worm, USNM no. 1638653); two paratypes (immature worms, LRP nos 9770 and 9771), three paratypes (mature worm SEM vouchers, LRP nos 9773–9775).

Sequence data: GenBank accession MW 419973 View Materials , hologenophore (CHL-76-5; VB136) LRP no. 8913.

Etymology: This species is named for Chilean parasitologist Dr Juan Carvajal, without whose assistance with the logistics, our fieldwork in Chile, which led to collection of the type material of this species, would not have been possible.

Remarks: Rockacestus carvajali is the smallest member of the genus, with a total length of 13.1– 14.5 (vs. 15–33, 170, 60–170, 50, 26–58, 50–140, 36–62 and 90 mm in Ro. arctowskii , Ro. brittanicus, Ro. georgiensis, Ro. piriei, Ro. radioductus, Ro. rakusai, Ro. siedleckii and Ro. williamsi , respectively). It further differs from all of these species except Ro. georgiensis and Ro. piriei in possessing bothridia that are highly, rather than moderately, folded. It possesses fewer testes per proglottid than both of the latter species (47 vs. 140–190 and 150, respectively).

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

MW

Museum Wasmann

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