Catadiscus marinholutzi Freitas & Lent, 1939

Aguiar, Aline, Morais, Drausio Honorio, Firmino Silva, Lidiane A., Anjos, Luciano Alves Dos, Foster, Ottilie Carolina & Silva, Reinaldo José Da, 2021, Biodiversity of anuran endoparasites from a transitional area between the Atlantic Forest and Cerrado biomes in Brazil: new records and remarks, Zootaxa 4948 (1), pp. 1-41 : 19

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4948.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:79CCDC5F-2F94-4398-B3DD-8DAC05669E9C

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4616124

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0C3AAD5F-FF7D-F61F-FF3D-DA9EFBADFC48

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Catadiscus marinholutzi Freitas & Lent, 1939
status

 

Catadiscus marinholutzi Freitas & Lent, 1939 View in CoL

Hosts (prevalence; range): L. fuscus (1/50; 1), L. podicipinus (45/225; 1–7), T. typhonius (2/16; 2–3) and P. azureus (1/47; 5).

Site of infection: small and large intestines.

Stage: adult.

Type host and type locality: L. latrans, Camis „o, Mato Grosso do Sul State, Brazil .

Comments: the genus Catadiscus is endemic to the Neotropical region and commonly found in the large intestine of anurans ( Jones et al. 2005). The species from this genus are characterized by a large and terminal acetabulum, short caeca that do not reach acetabular zone and a single testis ( Freitas & Lent 1939). Catadiscus marinholutzi resembles Catadiscus propinquus Freitas & Dobin Jr. and Catadiscus uruguayensis Freitas & Lent. However , from the morphological analysis of the small oral sucker, rounded testis, globular cirrus sac, pharynx length, and size and amount of eggs we concluded that our specimens belong to C. marinholutzi (see Freitas & Lent 1939). Leptodactylus fuscus , T. typhonius , and P. azureus constitute new hosts for C. marinholutzi .

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