Taricha Gray 1850
publication ID |
11755334 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:755DD8AE-C043-4411-BDFE-B9EC51F1D7E9 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/722F8796-1628-FFC1-FF7A-FF47D15B7E44 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Taricha Gray 1850 |
status |
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Host genus Taricha Gray 1850 View in CoL
(3 spp.)
Eimeria tarichae Levine 1980 ( Fig. 50).
Synonym: Eimeria grobbeni of Doran 1953.
Type host: Taricha torosa (Rathke 1833) , California newt .
Other hosts: None reported to date.
Type locality: NORTH AMERICA: USA, California, Los Angeles County, San Bernardino Mountains, Fish Canyon .
Geographic distribution: NORTH AMERICA: USA, California.
Description of sporulated oocyst: Oocyst shape: subspheroidal to slightly ellipsoidal; wall thickness: not given; wall characteristics: 1 smooth layer; L x W: 11–13 x 10–12; L/W ratio: unknown; M, OR, PG: all absent. Distinctive features of oocyst: none.
Description of sporocyst and sporozoites: Sporocyst shape: ovoidal, slightly pointed at one end; L x W: not given; L/W ratio unknown; SB, SSB, PSB: all absent; SR: present; SR characteristics: a compact mass of fine and coarse granules that appear membrane-bound, usually found in more rounded end of sporocyst; SZ: shorter than length of sporocyst, generally sausage-shaped, without obvious RB or N (line drawing). Distinctive features of sporocyst: none.
Prevalence: 3 of 28 (11%).
Sporulation: Unknown.
Prepatent and patent periods: Unknown.
Site of infection: Unknown, oocysts recovered from feces.
Endogenous stages: Unknown.
Pathology: Unknown.
Material deposited: None.
Remarks: Doran (1953) found this eimerian in the feces of 3 of 28 California newts, T. torosa . He called it E. grobbeni , described from the Alpine salamander, S. atra ( Rudovsky 1925) , but he admitted that the oocysts from California newts may belong to a new species. Levine (1980) pointed out that the form observed by Doran (1953) differed from that species ( E. grobbeni ) in lacking a micropyle and in host genus and considered it a separate species which he named E. trichae .
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