Kapsulotaenia saccifera ( von Rátz, 1900 ) Freze, 1963
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4869.4.4 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B88FBB1F-1083-472E-B429-1403BB080E07 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4562540 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FE4287AB-FF92-3C09-FF2C-FDEAFEEBABE4 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Kapsulotaenia saccifera ( von Rátz, 1900 ) Freze, 1963 |
status |
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5. Kapsulotaenia saccifera ( von Rátz, 1900) Freze, 1963
( Fig. 3C, G View FIGURE 3 )
Syns. Ichthyotaenia saccifera von Rátz, 1900 ; Acanthotaenia saccifera ( von Rátz, 1900) Johnston, 1909 ; Proteocephalus saccifera ( von Rátz, 1900) Johnston, 1912 ; Proteocephalus saccifer ( von Rátz, 1900) Baer, 1927 ; Crepidobothrium saccifera ( von Rátz, 1900) Meggitt, 1927
Type and only known host. Varanus sp. ( Squamata : Varanidae ).
Site of infection. Intestine.
Type locality. Papua-New Guinea (more precise locality not provided) .
Additional localities. Not known.
Type material. Syntypes—3 slides with fragments of several specimens including 4 scoleces from Varanus sp., Papua-New Guinea, collected by Ludwig Biró (MHNG-PLAT-36036–37; C116/41—several fragments of immature & mature proglottids & 1 immature spec. of Acanthotaenia biroi ( von Rátz, 1900) ; C116/42— 2 specimens with the scolex, 2 scoleces mixed with 1 specimen and one scolex of Acanthotaenia biroi ( von Rátz, 1900) ; C116/43—fragments of pregravid proglottids with banana-shaped egg clusters).
Material studied. Syntypes; 2 slides with numerous fragments of specimens identified as K. saccifera from Varanus (?) salvadorii (Peters & Doria, 1878), Bensbach River, Western Province, Papua-New Guinea, coll. by I. L. Owen ( NHMUK 1980.8.27.1–3).
Morphological description. von Rátz (1900); present study ( Fig. 3C, G View FIGURE 3 ; see Table 2 View TABLE 2 for new measurements).
Remarks. The original description of the species (as Ichthyotaenia saccifera ) was incomplete, with very few measurements and without any figure ( von Rátz 1900). In addition, the host was not identified to the species level (seven species of monitor lizards are currently reported from Papua-New Guinea—Pianka et al. 2004) and the type locality was not specified.
The type material studied by the present authors is in poor condition, which impeded a full redescription of the species. Nevertheless, it was possible to provide the first illustration of a pregravid proglottid and the scolex of K. saccifera , which forms a prominent apical cone surrounded by four lobes bearing small suckers ( Fig. 3C View FIGURE 3 ). The apical cone contains circular muscle fibres at its base and gland cells in its anterior-most part ( Fig. 3C View FIGURE 3 ); an apical organ was not observed and is most likely missing. A study of type specimens also enabled us to confirm that the eggs are grouped in elongate, banana-shaped capsules arranged longitudinally or slightly obliquely within the lumen of the uterus ( Fig. 3G View FIGURE 3 ). This is the most conspicuous feature of the species. Only K. frezei possesses clusters of eggs of similar shape, but differs markedly by the pre-equatorial position of the genital pore (see above and Fig. 3D View FIGURE 3 ).
Tapeworms found by I. L. Owen (NHMUK 1980.8.27.1-3) in the Western Province, Papua-New Guinea were misidentified as K. saccifera and in fact belong to another species of Kapsulotaenia , most likely an undescribed species, because its eggs do not form banana-shaped capsules.
The egg capsule of a specimen (NHMUK 1989.2.22.101–105) illustrated by de Chambrier (2006) and designated as Kapsulotaenia saccifera does not belong to K. saccifera and corresponds to another, unidentified species of Kapsulotaenia .
NHMUK |
Natural History Museum, London |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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