Spirometra sp. 2

Kuchta, Roman, Phillips, Anna J., Toma & Scholz, s, 2024, Diversity and biology of Spirometra tapeworms (Cestoda: Diphyllobothriidea), zoonotic parasites of wildlife: A review, International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife 24, pp. 100947-100947 : 100947-

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.ijppaw.2024.100947

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D410545B-FFB3-FF95-B9DF-8F03FBCFFA78

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Spirometra sp. 2
status

 

Spirometra sp. 2 (American lineage) Fig. 4 View Fig .

Synonym: Spirometra decipiens complex 1 of Kuchta et al. (2021) and Vettorazzi et al. (2023).

Material examined: Only one immature piece (hologenophore) from Lynx rufus , USA (Illinois) ( IPCAS C-987 ) .

Definitive host (molecularly confirmed): Domestic cat Canis familiaris in Uruguay; crab-eating fox Cerdocyon thous in Brazil and Uruguay; domestic cat Felis catus in Brazil and Chile; lesser grison Galictis cuja (Molina) in Brazil; Geoffroy’ s cat Leopardus geoffroyi in Brazil; pampa cat Leopardus munoai (Xim´enez) in Uruguay); ocelot Leopardus pardalis in Argentina; pampas fox Lycalopex gymnocercus (Fischer) in Argentina; hoary fox Lycalopex vetulus (Lund) in Brazil; bobcat Lynx rufus in USA; puma Puma concolor in Argentina.

Intermediate (or paratenic) hosts (molecularly confirmed): Human Homo sapiens in Venezuela; Crotalus sp. in Brazil; Philodryas patagoniensis in Uruguay; Didelphis albiventris in Brazil, Uruguay; Austrolebias charrua in Uruguay.

Geographical distribution: South America ( Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, Venezuela), North America ( USA – Illinois).

Representative DNA sequences: Miyadera et al. (2001), Petrigh et al. (2015), Almeida et al. (2016), Arrabal et al. (2020), Armúa-Fern´andez et al. (2021), Kuchta et al. (2021), Fredes et al. (2022), Kikuchi et al. (2021), Vettorazzi et al. (2023); Trindade et al. unpublished – see the Genbank database).

Selected morphological features: The uterus is similar in appearance to the Palaearctic species, i.e. it lacks the conspicuously enlarged C-shaped distal loops typical of S. decipiens ( Fig. 4 View Fig ).

Remarks

Kuchta et al. (2021) found two different lineages of Spirometra tapeworms in North and South America and named them S. decipiens complex 1 and S. decipiens complex 2. Tapeworms of complex 1 form a relatively well-supported lineage between the European S. erinaceieuropaei and the predominantly Palaearctic S. mansoni and S. asiana ( Fig. 1 View Fig ). This complex 1 consists of specimens of various South American carnivores (adults) and plerocercoids of reptiles and humans, including the enigmatic Sparganum proliferum ( Arrabal et al., 2020) . Vettorazzi et al. (2023) have also indicated the rivulid killifish Austrolebias charrua as paratenic host of this tapeworm, which is the first report of Spirometra plerocercoids in fish.

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