Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
Type: Article
Published: 2008-08-06
Page range: 1–23
Abstract views: 45
PDF downloaded: 2

Observations on the Parorchis acanthus complex (Philophthalmidae: Parorchiinae) with the description of three new species of Parorchis Nicoll, 1907 and the replacement of the preoccupied junior homonym Paratrema Dronen & Badley, 1979 with Stenomesotrema nomen novum

Laboratory of Parasitology, Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences, Texas A&M University, 2258 TAMU, College Station, Texas 77843-2258, U.S.A
Department of Biology, Gordon College, 255 Grapevine Road, Wenham, Massachusetts 01984, U.S.A
Platyhelminthes Catoptrophorus semipalmatus Charadriiformes clapper rail Galveston Gruiformes laughing gull Larus atricilla Paratrema Parorchiinae Parorchis Parorchis acanthus complex Parorchis catoptrophori Parorchis longivesiculus

Abstract

A brief history of the genus Parorchis Nicoll, 1907 (Philophthalmidae: Parorchiinae) is provided along with the description of 3 new species: Parorchis catoptrophori n. sp., distinguished by a bipartite pharynx with a larger, anterior, muscular primary pharynx, followed by a smaller posterior nonmuscular secondary part composed of 2 smaller posterior extensions; Parorchis longivesiculus n. sp., distinguished by an external seminal vesicle that overreaches the acetabulum posteriorly, extending into the hindbody to about midway between the testes and the acetabulum; and Parorchis ralli n. sp., distinguished by an external seminal vesicle, the posterior third of which is tubular and coiled. The preoccupied junior homonym Paratrema Dronen & Badley, 1979 (Parorchiinae) is replaced by Stenomesotrema nomen novum, and a rediagnosis of the genus is given wherein Stenomesotrema numenii n. comb. is assigned as the type species in the genus, and Stenomesotrema asiaticus n. comb. is proposed as a second species in the genus. Species of Parorchis are divided into 2 basic body types. The first type contains those species with a barbell-like or hourglass body shape, a rudimentary head collar, symmetrical to tandem testes, 2 rows of corner spines on the head collar, a preequatorial acetabulum, and a forebody that is wider than the hindbody. The second body type, called the “Parorchis body type”, contains those species with a pyriform body shape, a well-developed head collar, symmetrical testes, a single continuous row of circumoral spines on the head collar, and an equatorial acetabulum. There appears to be 2 subtypes of the Parorchis body type: subtype 1 containing those species possessing smooth to slightly irregular testes (not deeply lobed) and an esophagus lacking diverticuli; and subtype 2 containing those species having irregular and deeply lobed testes and an esophagus possessing lateral diverticuli. A comparative analysis of museum-deposited specimens of P. acanthus revealed as many as 9 possible additional species of Parorchis. This suggests potential problems in using measurements of structures alone without differences in additional corroborating specific features to separate species of Parorchis. Along with measurements, the number and size of spines on the circumoral collar, the presence or absence of a prepharynx, an intertesticular space, and esophageal diverticula as well as the extent of the posttesticular space, the length of the metraterm, egg size and the ratios of the width of the oral sucker to the width of the acetabulum and the width of the pharynx to the width of the oral sucker appear useful in distinguishing species of Parorchis.

References

  1. American Ornithologist’s Union. (1998) Check-list of North American Birds. 7th Edition. American Ornithologists’ Union. Washington, D. C. 829 pp.

    Angel, L.M. (1954) Parorchis acanthus var. australia n. var., with an account of the life cycle in South Australia. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia, 77, 164–174.

    Belopol’skaia, M.M. (1963) Helminth fauna of the sandpipiers in the lower region of the Amur in period of flight and nidification. Trematoda. Trudy Gel’mintologicheskaia Laboratoriia, 13, 164–195. (In Russian)

    Cable, R.M., Connor, R.S. & Balling, J.W. (1960) Digenetic trematodes of Puerto Rican shore birds. Scientific Survey of Porto Rico and the Virgin Islands (the New York Academy of Sciences), 17, 187–254.

    Cable, R.M. & Martin, W.E. (1935) Parorchis avitus (Linton, 1914), a synonym of P. acanthus (Nicoll, 1906). Journal of Parasitology, 21, 436–437. (Abstract)

    Dadasheva, Z.P. & Filimonova, L.V. (1978) A new trematode from the genus Parorchis Nicoll, 1907 from Charadriiformes in Azerbaidzhan. Materialy Nauchnoi Konferentsi Vsesoiuznogo Obshchestva Gel’mintologov, 30, 75–79. (In Russian)

    Dronen, N.O. & Badley, J.E. (1979) Helminths of shorebirds from the Texas Gulfcoast. I. Digenetic trematodes from the long-billed curlew, Numenius americanus. Journal of Parasitology, 65, 645–649.

    Fischthal, J.H. & Kuntz, R.E. (1975) Parorchis chauhani sp. n. (Trematoda: Philophthalmidae) from a bird from North Borneo (Malaysia). Dr. B. S. Chauhan Commemorative Volume, 75–77.

    Golovin, O.V. (1956) Trematodes in birds of Komi ASSR. Uchenye Zapiski Kalininskii Gosudarstvennyi Pedagogicheskii Institut, 1956, 283–289.

    ICZN (International Code of Zoological Nomenclature) (1999) International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, 4th Edition, The International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature, London, U. K., 306 pp.

    Kanev, I., Radev, V. & Fried, B. (2005) Family Philophthalmidae Looss, 1899. In Jones, A., Bray, R. A. & Gibson, D. I. (Ed.) Keys to the Trematoda, Volume 2. CABI Publishing and The Natural History Museum, London, UK, 87–97.

    Koehler, R. (1927) Échinides du Musée Indien à Calcutta III. Échinides réguliers: Echinoderma of the Indian Museum, 10, 1–158.

    Lal, M.B. (1936) A new species of the genus Parorchis from Totanus hypoleucos, with certain remarks on the family Echinostomidae. Proceedings of the Indian Academy of Sciences, 4, 27–35.

    Linton, E. (1914) Notes on a viviparous distome. Proceedings of the United States Museum, 46, 551–555.

    Nicoll, W. (1906) Some new and little-known trematodes. The Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 17, 513–527.

    Nicoll, W. (1907a) Parorchis acanthus n. nom. for Zeugorchis Nicoll, 1906. The Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 19, 128.

    Nicoll, W. (1907b) Parorchis acanthus, the type of a new genus of trematodes. Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science, 51, 345–355.

    Oshmarin, P.G. (1963) Parasitic worms from mammals and birds of Primorskii Krai. Moskva, Izd-vo Akademii nauk, SSSR, 322 pp.

    Rappole, J.H. & Blacklock, G.W. (1994) Birds of Texas. Texas A&M University Press, College Station, Texas, 280 pp.

    Reish, D.J. (1950) New host and distribution records for two trematodes from western gull. Journal of Parasitology, 36, 84.

    Shtrom, Z.K. (1927) Parorchis asiaticus n. sp., ein neur Trematoden der Guttung Parorchis Nicoll, 1907. Zoologischer Anzeiger, 54, 249–255.

    Skrjabin, K.I. (1924) Proctobium gedoelsti n. sp. nouveau trématode de l’intestin des becasseaux. Moscow, Russia, 4 pp.

    Skrjabin, K.I. (1966) Family Parorchiidae Skrjabin, 1965. In: Skrjabin, K. I. (Ed.), Trematodes of Animals and Man, Volume 22. Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow, USSR, 39–49. (In Russian)

    Sudarikov, V.E. & Pavlov, A.V. (1966) Parorchis crassus n. sp., a new species of trematode from birds in Vietnam. Materialy Nauchnoi Konferentsii Vsesoiuznogo Obshchestva Gel’mintologov, 3, 265–268. (In Russian)

    Travassos, L. (1918) New type of Philophthalmidae. Revista da Academia Brasileira De Sciencias, 2, 75–77.

    Yamaguti, S. (1971) Synopsis of Digenetic Trematodes of Vertebrates, Keigaku Publishing Company, Tokyo, Japan, 1,074 + 349 pp.