Pronoprymna petrowi Bray & Gibson 1980

Pronoprymna petrowi (Layman, 1930) Bray & Gibson, 1980 (Figure 1 (b)) Host. Clupea pallasii pallasii. Site of infection. Intestine. Locality. Off eastern shore of Kamchatka Peninsula (59°15ʹ6 N & 163°43ʹ9E) at a depth of 80 m. Prevalence. 15 of 30 host specimens (50%). Intensity of infection...

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Main Authors: Sokolov, S. G., Shchenkov, S. V., Gordeev, I. I.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5496872
https://zenodo.org/record/5496872
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5496872
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Platyhelminthes
Trematoda
Plagiorchiida
Faustulidae
Pronoprymna
Pronoprymna petrowi
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Platyhelminthes
Trematoda
Plagiorchiida
Faustulidae
Pronoprymna
Pronoprymna petrowi
Sokolov, S. G.
Shchenkov, S. V.
Gordeev, I. I.
Pronoprymna petrowi Bray & Gibson 1980
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Platyhelminthes
Trematoda
Plagiorchiida
Faustulidae
Pronoprymna
Pronoprymna petrowi
description Pronoprymna petrowi (Layman, 1930) Bray & Gibson, 1980 (Figure 1 (b)) Host. Clupea pallasii pallasii. Site of infection. Intestine. Locality. Off eastern shore of Kamchatka Peninsula (59°15ʹ6 N & 163°43ʹ9E) at a depth of 80 m. Prevalence. 15 of 30 host specimens (50%). Intensity of infection. 1–120 worms per host specimen. Deposited material. Two paragenophores (IPEE RAS 14295). Representative DNA sequences. A partial 28S rRNA gene sequence was deposited in Genbank (NCBI) as MT872204. Description (based on a slightly macerated paragenophore). Body fusiform, length 1,018, maximum width 217 at level of ventral sucker, 21.3% of length. Tegument unarmed. Oral sucker cup-shaped, 98 × 126, length 9.6% of body length; oral opening subterminal. Ventral sucker 112 × 112, length 10.9% of body length. Sucker width ratio 1:0.89. Forebody 25.4% of body length. Prepharynx not detected. Pharynx 45 × 39, length 4.5% of body length. Oral sucker to pharynx width ratio 1:0.31. Oesophagus 87, 8.6% of body length. Intestinal bifurcation in posterior quarter of forebody. Caeca terminating at level of testes; post-caecal distance 43.9% of body length. Testes two, entire, opposite, in anterior third of hindbody, separated from ventral sucker; left 116 × 70, length 11.3% of body length; right 105 × 63, length 10.3% of body length. Post-testicular region length 43.9% of body length. Cirrus-sac clavate, thin-walled, extending posteriorly slightly beyond ventral sucker, enclosing bipartite seminal vesicle, very small vesicular pars prostatica, and ejaculatory duct, 126 × 35, length 12.4% of body length. Genital atrium tubular. Genital pore median, anterior to ventral sucker. Ovary trilobed, median, post-testicular, 126 × 88, length 12.4% of body length. Laurer’s canal not detected. Mehlis’ gland anterior to ovary. Uterus filling most of hindbody. Eggs 31 × 17. Vitellarium from two lateral compact oval masses, posterior to ventral sucker, left 91 × 49, length 8.9% of body length, right 70 × 45, length 6.9% of body length. Vitelline ducts wide, running towards median line of body, ventral to testes. Excretory vesicle almost V-shaped; excretory pore terminal. Remarks. Layman (1930) originally described Pr. petrowi under the name ‘ Monorcheides (?) petrowi ’ basing on specimens found in Osmerus dentex Steindachner & Kner, 1870 (Osmeridae) caught in the Peter the Great Bay (Japan Sea). The genus affiliation of this species has been repeatedly discussed by various authors (see reviews of Margolis and Ching 1965; Shimazu 2018). Combination with the generic name Pronoprymna was proposed by Bray and Gibson (1980). Sucker-ratio 1:0.89, oral sucker cup-shaped and the cirrus-sac extending beyond the posterior edge of the ventral sucker, as well as the general morphology of the cirrus-sac, position of the testes, the shape and arrangement of the ovary and the vitellarium indicate that our specimens belong to Pr. petrowi (compare with Margolis and Ching 1965; Shimazu 2018). : Published as part of Sokolov, S. G., Shchenkov, S. V. & Gordeev, I. I., 2021, A phylogenetic assessment of Pronoprymna spp. (Digenea: Faustulidae) and Pacific and Antarctic representatives of the genus Steringophorus Odhner, 1905 (Digenea: Fellodistomidae), with description of a new species, pp. 867-887 in Journal of Natural History 55 (13 - 14) on pages 873-874, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2021.1923852, http://zenodo.org/record/5464733 : {"references": ["Layman EM. 1930. Parasitic worms from the fishes of Peter the Great Bay. Bul Pac Sci Fish Res Stat, Vladivostok. 3: 1 - 120. In Russian.", "Bray RA, Gibson DI. 1980. The Fellodistomidae (Digenea) of fishes from the northeast Atlantic. Bul Br Mus Nat Hist, Zool Ser. 37: 199 - 293.", "Margolis L, Ching HL. 1965. Review of the trematode genera Bacciger and Pentagramma (Fellodistomatidae) and description of P. petrowi (Layman, 1930) n. comb. from marine fishes from the Pacific coast of Canada. Can J Zool. 43: 381 - 405. doi: 10.1139 / z 65 - 037", "Shimazu T. 2018. Adult digeneans (Trematoda) parasitic in Hypomesus nipponensis (Osteichthyes, Osmeridae) from brackish-water lakes of Japan. Bull Natl Mus Nat Sci, Ser A. 44: 57 - 68."]}
format Text
author Sokolov, S. G.
Shchenkov, S. V.
Gordeev, I. I.
author_facet Sokolov, S. G.
Shchenkov, S. V.
Gordeev, I. I.
author_sort Sokolov, S. G.
title Pronoprymna petrowi Bray & Gibson 1980
title_short Pronoprymna petrowi Bray & Gibson 1980
title_full Pronoprymna petrowi Bray & Gibson 1980
title_fullStr Pronoprymna petrowi Bray & Gibson 1980
title_full_unstemmed Pronoprymna petrowi Bray & Gibson 1980
title_sort pronoprymna petrowi bray & gibson 1980
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2021
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5496872
https://zenodo.org/record/5496872
long_lat ENVELOPE(160.000,160.000,56.000,56.000)
ENVELOPE(-114.067,-114.067,-74.833,-74.833)
geographic Antarctic
Canada
Pacific
Kamchatka Peninsula
Bray
geographic_facet Antarctic
Canada
Pacific
Kamchatka Peninsula
Bray
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Kamchatka
Kamchatka Peninsula
Northeast Atlantic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Kamchatka
Kamchatka Peninsula
Northeast Atlantic
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info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5496872
https://doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2021.1923852
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5496872 2023-05-15T13:43:38+02:00 Pronoprymna petrowi Bray & Gibson 1980 Sokolov, S. G. Shchenkov, S. V. Gordeev, I. I. 2021 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5496872 https://zenodo.org/record/5496872 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/5464733 http://publication.plazi.org/id/3C314E38B33DAF34791BFFB4FFFAE74B http://zoobank.org/6217E5D2-00FD-4135-A8DA-CDBAFACA529B https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2021.1923852 http://zenodo.org/record/5464733 http://publication.plazi.org/id/3C314E38B33DAF34791BFFB4FFFAE74B https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5464735 http://zoobank.org/6217E5D2-00FD-4135-A8DA-CDBAFACA529B https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5496871 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Platyhelminthes Trematoda Plagiorchiida Faustulidae Pronoprymna Pronoprymna petrowi Text Taxonomic treatment article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2021 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5496872 https://doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2021.1923852 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5464735 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5496871 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Pronoprymna petrowi (Layman, 1930) Bray & Gibson, 1980 (Figure 1 (b)) Host. Clupea pallasii pallasii. Site of infection. Intestine. Locality. Off eastern shore of Kamchatka Peninsula (59°15ʹ6 N & 163°43ʹ9E) at a depth of 80 m. Prevalence. 15 of 30 host specimens (50%). Intensity of infection. 1–120 worms per host specimen. Deposited material. Two paragenophores (IPEE RAS 14295). Representative DNA sequences. A partial 28S rRNA gene sequence was deposited in Genbank (NCBI) as MT872204. Description (based on a slightly macerated paragenophore). Body fusiform, length 1,018, maximum width 217 at level of ventral sucker, 21.3% of length. Tegument unarmed. Oral sucker cup-shaped, 98 × 126, length 9.6% of body length; oral opening subterminal. Ventral sucker 112 × 112, length 10.9% of body length. Sucker width ratio 1:0.89. Forebody 25.4% of body length. Prepharynx not detected. Pharynx 45 × 39, length 4.5% of body length. Oral sucker to pharynx width ratio 1:0.31. Oesophagus 87, 8.6% of body length. Intestinal bifurcation in posterior quarter of forebody. Caeca terminating at level of testes; post-caecal distance 43.9% of body length. Testes two, entire, opposite, in anterior third of hindbody, separated from ventral sucker; left 116 × 70, length 11.3% of body length; right 105 × 63, length 10.3% of body length. Post-testicular region length 43.9% of body length. Cirrus-sac clavate, thin-walled, extending posteriorly slightly beyond ventral sucker, enclosing bipartite seminal vesicle, very small vesicular pars prostatica, and ejaculatory duct, 126 × 35, length 12.4% of body length. Genital atrium tubular. Genital pore median, anterior to ventral sucker. Ovary trilobed, median, post-testicular, 126 × 88, length 12.4% of body length. Laurer’s canal not detected. Mehlis’ gland anterior to ovary. Uterus filling most of hindbody. Eggs 31 × 17. Vitellarium from two lateral compact oval masses, posterior to ventral sucker, left 91 × 49, length 8.9% of body length, right 70 × 45, length 6.9% of body length. Vitelline ducts wide, running towards median line of body, ventral to testes. Excretory vesicle almost V-shaped; excretory pore terminal. Remarks. Layman (1930) originally described Pr. petrowi under the name ‘ Monorcheides (?) petrowi ’ basing on specimens found in Osmerus dentex Steindachner & Kner, 1870 (Osmeridae) caught in the Peter the Great Bay (Japan Sea). The genus affiliation of this species has been repeatedly discussed by various authors (see reviews of Margolis and Ching 1965; Shimazu 2018). Combination with the generic name Pronoprymna was proposed by Bray and Gibson (1980). Sucker-ratio 1:0.89, oral sucker cup-shaped and the cirrus-sac extending beyond the posterior edge of the ventral sucker, as well as the general morphology of the cirrus-sac, position of the testes, the shape and arrangement of the ovary and the vitellarium indicate that our specimens belong to Pr. petrowi (compare with Margolis and Ching 1965; Shimazu 2018). : Published as part of Sokolov, S. G., Shchenkov, S. V. & Gordeev, I. I., 2021, A phylogenetic assessment of Pronoprymna spp. (Digenea: Faustulidae) and Pacific and Antarctic representatives of the genus Steringophorus Odhner, 1905 (Digenea: Fellodistomidae), with description of a new species, pp. 867-887 in Journal of Natural History 55 (13 - 14) on pages 873-874, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2021.1923852, http://zenodo.org/record/5464733 : {"references": ["Layman EM. 1930. Parasitic worms from the fishes of Peter the Great Bay. Bul Pac Sci Fish Res Stat, Vladivostok. 3: 1 - 120. In Russian.", "Bray RA, Gibson DI. 1980. The Fellodistomidae (Digenea) of fishes from the northeast Atlantic. Bul Br Mus Nat Hist, Zool Ser. 37: 199 - 293.", "Margolis L, Ching HL. 1965. Review of the trematode genera Bacciger and Pentagramma (Fellodistomatidae) and description of P. petrowi (Layman, 1930) n. comb. from marine fishes from the Pacific coast of Canada. Can J Zool. 43: 381 - 405. doi: 10.1139 / z 65 - 037", "Shimazu T. 2018. Adult digeneans (Trematoda) parasitic in Hypomesus nipponensis (Osteichthyes, Osmeridae) from brackish-water lakes of Japan. Bull Natl Mus Nat Sci, Ser A. 44: 57 - 68."]} Text Antarc* Antarctic Kamchatka Kamchatka Peninsula Northeast Atlantic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic Canada Pacific Kamchatka Peninsula ENVELOPE(160.000,160.000,56.000,56.000) Bray ENVELOPE(-114.067,-114.067,-74.833,-74.833)