Back to Search Start Over

Six new dactylogyrid species (Platyhelminthes, Monogenea) from the gills of cichlids (Teleostei, Cichliformes) from the Lower Congo Basin.

Authors :
Jorissen MWP
Pariselle A
Huyse T
Vreven EJ
Snoeks J
Decru E
Kusters T
Lunkayilakio SW
Bukinga FM
Artois T
Vanhove MPM
Source :
Parasite (Paris, France) [Parasite] 2018; Vol. 25, pp. 64. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 Dec 07.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

The Lower Congo Basin is characterized by a mangrove-lined estuary at its mouth and, further upstream, by many hydrogeographical barriers such as rapids and narrow gorges. Five localities in the mangroves and four from (upstream) left bank tributaries or pools were sampled. On the gills of Coptodon tholloni, Coptodon rendalli, Hemichromis elongatus, Hemichromis stellifer and Tylochromis praecox, 17 species of parasites (Dactylogyridae & Gyrodactylidae, Monogenea) were found, eight of which are new to science. Six of these are herein described: Cichlidogyrus bixlerzavalai n. sp. and Cichlidogyrus omari n. sp. from T. praecox, Cichlidogyrus calycinus n. sp. and Cichlidogyrus polyenso n. sp. from H. elongatus, Cichlidogyrus kmentovae n. sp. from H. stellifer and Onchobdella ximenae n. sp. from both species of Hemichromis. On Cichlidogyrus reversati a ridge on the accessory piece was discovered that connects to the basal bulb of the penis. We report a putative spillback effect of the native parasites Cichlidogyrus berradae, Cichlidogyrus cubitus and Cichlidogyrus flexicolpos from C. tholloni to the introduced C. rendalli. From our results, we note that the parasite fauna of Lower Congo has a higher affinity with the fauna of West African and nearby freshwater ecoregions than it has with fauna of other regions of the Congo Basin and Central Africa.<br /> (© M.W.P. Jorissen et al., published by EDP Sciences, 2018.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1776-1042
Volume :
25
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Parasite (Paris, France)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30526819
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/parasite/2018059