Tylolaimophorus minor Thorne 1939

Tylolaimophorus minor (Thorne, 1939) Goodey, 1963 After Thorne (1939) After Thorne (1974) After Eroshenko & Tepljakov (1977) After Brzeski (1994) MEASUREMENTS Holotype female: L = 0.6 mm; a = 17; b = 6.3; body width = (35) µm; spear =? µm; pharynx = (95) µm; tail = (30) µm; c = 20; c’ = (1.3); V...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ghaderi, Reza, Asghari, Ramezan, Eskandari, Ali
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2020
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3812497
https://zenodo.org/record/3812497
Description
Summary:Tylolaimophorus minor (Thorne, 1939) Goodey, 1963 After Thorne (1939) After Thorne (1974) After Eroshenko & Tepljakov (1977) After Brzeski (1994) MEASUREMENTS Holotype female: L = 0.6 mm; a = 17; b = 6.3; body width = (35) µm; spear =? µm; pharynx = (95) µm; tail = (30) µm; c = 20; c’ = (1.3); V = 50. ? females: L = 0.4-0.7 mm; a = 16; b = 6.1; c = 18; V = 52. 19 females: L = 0.34-0.60 mm; a = 10-23; b = 3.7-6.1; spear = 12-15 µm; c = 12-18; V = 53-64. 77 females: L = 0.38-0.58 mm; a = 13-23; b = 3.9-7.0; spear = 9-12 µm; pharynx = 79-112 µm; tail = 20-33 µm; c = 15-23; c’ = 0.9-1.7; V = 43-61. DESCRIPTION Female. Body arcuate ventrad to C shaped. Cuticle up to 1 µm thick, striation only visible on younger specimens and then striae very shallow. Some body pores seen on dorsal and ventral sides. Lip region separated by a shallow depression that may not be observable in older, thickened specimens. Amphidial opening about 3 µm wide or 27-37 % of lip region width. Pharynx with fusiform median swelling and short pyriform basal bulb. Body width at pharynx base 2.2-2.9 times lip region width. Vulva a minute transverse slit. Vagina extending 27-30 % into body. Ovaries symmetrical, reflexed about halfway back to the vulva. Rectum 6-8 µm long or about one-third the anal body diameter. Post-anal intestinal sac extends into tail to varying lengths in most of the examined specimens. Body tapering from a short distance posterior to the anus. Tail dorsally convex-conoid, bluntly rounded at the terminus. Male. Never described. DIAGNOSIS AND RELATIONSHIPS Tylolaimophorus minor has been differentiated from T. cylindricus by its smaller size (0.4-0.6 vs 1.2-2.1 mm) and more tapering tail. It also should be compared with other species which have small body sizes: T. tegmentum differs by a longer spear (15-17 vs 10-12 µm) and the presence of males, and both T. digitatus and T. indicus are bisexual species, have a distended cuticle, rectum with thin walls, and more pointed tails. Thorne (1974) reported a population with the name Triplonchium parvum Thorne, 1939. Brzeski (1994) suggested that this is, in fact, a population of T. minor , and the error is evident from the reproduction of the tail drawing from the original description of T. minor . Brzeski further noted that Thorne (1939) didn’t use the name T. parvum . DISTRIBUTION Described from foothill soil near Salt Lake City, Utah, USA (Thorne 1939). Recovered in the forests of Tippecanoe County, Indiana, the USA (Johnson et al. 1972). Also reported from several other localities in the USA: from native sod, windbreaks and forest shrubs and trees in South Dakota, North Dakota and Iowa (Thorne 1974). It has been recovered from three localities in Russia: in soil and forest litter in the Dalnegorsky region, in forest soil at the edge of the city of Khabarovsk, and in the rhizosphere of Scots pine in Korsakovo on Sakhalin Island (Eroshenko & Tepljakov 1977), and also from Slovakia: in forests of the Vihorlat Protected Landscape Area (Hánĕl & Čerevková 2010). Two populations were reported in association with forests ( Quercus dalechampii Ten.) in Rhodopes, Bulgaria (Peneva et al. 2011). Two other populations of the species were found during the present study from the rhizosphere of alder and hawthorn trees in Gilan, Northern Iran (see below). : Published as part of Ghaderi, Reza, Asghari, Ramezan & Eskandari, Ali, 2020, Systematics of the genus Tylolaimophorus de Man, 1880 (Nematoda Diphtherophoridae), with description of T. minor (Thorne, 1939) Goodey, 1963 from Iran, pp. 322-340 in Zootaxa 4755 (2) on pages 331-332, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4755.2.7, http://zenodo.org/record/3733635 : {"references": ["Thorne, G. (1939) A monograph of the nematodes of the superfamily Dorylaimoidea. Capita Zoologica, 8, 1 - 263.", "Goodey, T. (1963) Soil and freshwater nematodes. 2 th Edition. Revised by J. B. Goodey. Methuen, London, 554 pp.", "Thorne, G. (1974) Nematodes of the Northern Great Plains. Part II. Dorylaimoidea in part (Nemata: Adenophorea). Technical Bulletin of Agricultural Experiment Station, South Dakota State University, Brookings, South Dakota, 120 pp.", "Eroshenko, A. S. & Tepljakov, A. A. (1977) [Nematodes of the Dal'nev forest fauna of the Diphtherophoridae family]. Trudy Biologopochvennova Instituta Novaya Seriya, 47, 21 - 34. [in Russian]", "Brzeski, M. W. (1994) Synopsis of Tylolaimophorus de Man, 1880 (Nematoda: Diphtherophoridae). Nematologica, 40, 313 - 327. https: // doi. org / 10.1163 / 003525994 X 00229", "Johnson, S. R., Ferris, V. R. & Ferris, J. M. (1972) Nematode community structure of forest woodlots. I. Relationships based on similarity coefficients of nematode species. Journal of Nematology, 4, 175 - 183.", "Hanel, L. & Cerevkova, A. (2010) Species and genera of soil nematodes in forest ecosystems of the Vihorlat Protected Land- scape Area, Slovakia. Helminthologia, 47, 123 - 135. https: // doi. org / 10.2478 / s 11687 - 010 - 0019 - 6", "Peneva, V., Lazarova, S., Nedelchev, S. & Elshishka, M. (2011) Plant nematodes of the Rhodopes (Bulgaria): an overview and additional data. In: Beron, P. (Ed.), Biodiversity of Bulgaria. 4. Biodiversity of Western Rhodopes (Bulgaria and Greece). Pensoft & National Museum of Natural History, Sofia, pp. 31 - 54."]}