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First elucidation of a didymozoid life cycle: Saccularina magnacetabula n. gen. n. sp. infecting an arcid bivalve
Institution:1. Marine Parasitology Laboratory, The University of Queensland, School of Biological Sciences, St Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia;2. Aquatic Animal Health Research Laboratory, Indian Ocean Marine Research Centre, Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development, 86 West Coast Drive, Waterman''s Bay, WA 6020, Australia;1. Department of Veterinary Microbiology & Pathology, Washington State University, P.O. Box 647040, Pullman, WA 99164, USA;2. Animal Disease Research Unit, Agricultural Research Service, US Department of Agriculture, P.O. Box 646630, Pullman, WA 99164, USA;1. Department of Botany and Zoology, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University, Kotlá?ská 2, 611 37, Brno, Czech Republic;2. Research Group Zoology: Biodiversity and Toxicology, Centre for Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Sciences, UHasselt – Hasselt University, Agoralaan Gebouw D, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium;3. ISEM, CNRS, Université de Montpellier, IRD, Montpellier, France;4. Laboratory “Biodiversity, Ecology and Genome”, Mohammed V University in Rabat, Faculty of Sciences, 4 avenue Ibn Batouta, BP 1014, Rabat, Morocco
Abstract:The first first-intermediate host for a species of Didymozoidae (Trematoda: Hemiuroidea), a bivalve of the family Arcidae, is identified using multi-loci molecular data. First intermediate, (likely) third intermediate, and adult stages of a new didymozoid taxon (Saccularina magnacetabula n. gen. n. sp.) from Moreton Bay, Queensland, Australia were collected from the Sydney cockle Anadara trapezia (Deshayes) (Arcoidea: Arcidae), Sillago sp. (Sillaginidae) and Elops hawaiensis Regan (Elopiformes: Elopidae), respectively, and genetically matched. Infections in A. trapezia were present as sporocysts and cystophorous cercariae, and infected tissue at the base of the gills. Morphologically, S. magnacetabula is distinctive relative to all other didymozoids in the combination of hermaphroditism, mate-pairing, filiform body shape, the presence of a ventral sucker, a single testis, and a saccular excretory vesicle at the posterior extremity. Molecular sequence data were generated for S. magnacetabula and 42 other putative didymozoid species to explore relationships within the Didymozoidae and Hemiuroidea. In molecular phylogenetic analyses of the 28S rDNA region, the new genus forms a clade with an undescribed taxon from the redthroat emperor, Lethrinus miniatus (Bloch & Schneider) (Perciformes: Lethrinidae), from the Great Barrier Reef, and another uncharacterised taxon from E. hawaiensis. This clade is sister to a moderately well-supported clade comprising all other didymozoid species for which sequences are available, including representatives of five of the six presently recognised subfamilies. The infection of a bivalve by a didymozoid is discussed in the context of the overwhelming use of gastropod molluscs as first intermediate hosts by the Hemiuroidea.
Keywords:Didymozoidae  Hemiuroidea  Life cycle  Bivalve  Phylogeny
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