Jump to content

Traklosia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Traklosia
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Nematoda
Class: Chromadorea
Order: Rhabditida
Family: Traklosiidae
Genus: Traklosia
Bernard & Phillips, 2015[1]
Type species
Robertia leiperi
Travassos & Kloss, 1961[2]
Species
Synonyms
  • Robertia Travassos & Kloss, 1961[2] nec Boonstra, 1948

Traklosia is a genus of nematodes. The genus was originally circumscribed in 1961 under the name Robertia; L. Travassos and G. R. Kloss created this genus for their newly-described species R. leiperi. The nomen novum, Traklosia, was created for this genus in 2015 — Robertia was an invalid name due to a senior homonym. It consists of three species found in Brazil and Cuba, and they are parasites of millipedes.

Taxonomic history

[edit]

In 2015, Ernest C. Bernard and Gary Phillips coined Traklosia as nomen novum for Robertia. The word Traklosia comes from the first three letters in the surnames of L. Travassos and G. R. Kloss.[1] Travassos and Kloss had circumscribed the genus Robertia for their newly-described species Robertia leiperi in 1961.[2] The generic name Robertia was unavailable because a senior homonym, the synapsid genus Robertia, was named in 1948.[1]

Traklosia is the type genus of the family Traklosiidae, which was changed from Robertiidae.[1] The genus Triumphalisnema is in the same family.[1] Travassos and Kloss initially placed their genus Robertia in a new subfamily Robertiinae in the family Thelastomatidae.[2] George Poinar Jr. recognized Robertiidae as its own family in 1977.[4] In 1989, Adamson synonymized Robertiidae with Thelastomatidae.[5] The family Traklosiidae is thought to be valid according to Gary Phillips and colleagues.[4]

Species

[edit]

As of 2015, three species are recognized in the genus Traklosia. All of them were initially described with the generic name Robertia. The three species are: T. cubana, T. leiperi, and T. longicauda. The type species is T. leiperi, under its original combination Robertia leiperi.[1] T. cubana was described in 1984 by S. E. Spiridonov of the USSR Academy of Science. T. leiperi was described in 1961 by L. Travassos and G. R. Kloss of the Oswaldo Cruz Institute.[2] T. longicauda was described in 1995 by Nayla García, Alberto Coy, and Marianela Álvarez, all parasitologists at the Cuban Academy of Sciences.[3]

Diagnosis and description

[edit]

Females in this genus are very small. The female reproductive system has only one genital tract. Their uteri are parallel and oriented to their posterior. They bear a single egg at a time, and eggs are ovalish. Their vagina points anteriorly and is in the posterior third of their body (excluding the tail).[5] Males have a caudal extremity which suddenly narrows half-way making its end thread-like. Their genital cone is well developed.[5]

Distribution

[edit]

Traklosia is found in South America and the West Indies.[5] T. cubana and T. longicauda are both found in Cuba: T. cubana has been recorded in Guantánamo along the Carretera Central between Imías and Baracoa, and T. longicauda has been recorded in the National Botanical Garden in Havana.[6] T. leiperi has been recorded in the Brazilian state of Rio de Janeiro.[5][2]

Hosts

[edit]

Traklosia species infect hosts in the orders Coleoptera and Diplopoda.[7] T. cubana and T. longicauda have both been found in the millipede genus Rhinocricus: T. cubana has been found in an unspecified Rhinocricus species and T. longicauda has been found in R. duvernoyi.[6] T. leiperi has been found in the millipede species Eurydesmus ruidus.[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f Bernard, Ernest C.; Phillips, Gary (2015). "Replacement names for two nematode junior homonyms". Zootaxa. 4052 (4): 479–480. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.4052.4.6. PMID 26701445.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Travassos, L.; Kloss, G. R. (1961). "Sur un Curieux Nématode, Robertia leiperi gen. et sp. nov., Parasite de l'Intestin Postérieur de Diplopode". Journal of Helminthology. 35 (R. T. Leiper Supplement): 187–190. doi:10.1017/S0022149X00017740. S2CID 85172857.
  3. ^ a b García, Nayla; Coy, Alberto; Álvarez, Marianela (1995). "Nuevo género y nuevas especies de nemátodos (Nematoda) parásitos de artrópodos cubanos" (PDF). Poeyana (in Spanish). 449: 1–15. ISSN 0138-6476. Archived (PDF) from the original on 7 January 2017.
  4. ^ a b Phillips, Gary; Bernard, Ernest C.; Pivar, Robert J.; Moulton, John K.; Shelley, Rowland M. (2016). "Coronostoma claireae n. sp. (Nematoda: Rhabditida: Oxyuridomorpha: Coronostomatidae) from the Indigenous Milliped Narceus gordanus (Chamberlain, 1943) (Diplopoda: Spirobolida) in Ocala National Forest, Florida". Journal of Nematology. 48 (3): 167–168. doi:10.21307/jofnem-2017-023. ISSN 0022-300X. PMC 5070928. PMID 27765989.
  5. ^ a b c d e Adamson, Martin L.; van Waerebeke, Daniel (1992). "Revision of the Thelastomatoidea, Oxyurida of invertebrate hosts I. Thelastomatidae". Systematic Parasitology. 21: 41. doi:10.1007/BF00009911. S2CID 25233827.
  6. ^ a b García, Nayla; Coy, Alberto; Ventosa, Luisa (2002). "Rigonemátidos y oxiúridos (Nematoda: Rhigonematida, Oxyurida) asociados a la artropodofauna cubana" (PDF). Cocuyo. 12: 4.
  7. ^ Jex, Aaron R.; Schneider, Margaret A.; Cribb, Thomas H. (September 2006). "The importance of host ecology in thelastomatoid (Nematoda: Oxyurida) host specificity". Parasitology International. 55 (3): 169–74. doi:10.1016/j.parint.2006.03.001. PMID 16675294.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Spiridinov, S. E. (1984). "New oxyurid species from the intestine of Rhinocricus sp". Trudy Zoologicheskogo Instituta (in Russian). 126: 33–49.