Paramononchus major Gagarin & Naumova, 2016, sp. n.

Paramononchus major sp. n. (Fig. 3, 4; Table 2) Type material. Holotype male, slide references number 102 / 51, deposited in the museum collection of the Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Center for Parasitology, Russian Academy of Sciences (Moscow, Russia). Paratypes . Six males and twelve female...

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Main Authors: Gagarin, Vladimir G., Naumova, Tatyana V.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5617446
https://zenodo.org/record/5617446
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5617446
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
Nematoda
Adenophorea
Dorylaimida
Mononchidae
Paramononchus
Paramononchus major
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Nematoda
Adenophorea
Dorylaimida
Mononchidae
Paramononchus
Paramononchus major
Gagarin, Vladimir G.
Naumova, Tatyana V.
Paramononchus major Gagarin & Naumova, 2016, sp. n.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Nematoda
Adenophorea
Dorylaimida
Mononchidae
Paramononchus
Paramononchus major
description Paramononchus major sp. n. (Fig. 3, 4; Table 2) Type material. Holotype male, slide references number 102 / 51, deposited in the museum collection of the Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Center for Parasitology, Russian Academy of Sciences (Moscow, Russia). Paratypes . Six males and twelve females deposited in the collection of the Limnological Institute, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences (Irkutsk, Russia). Measurements. Table 2. Type locality. Bolshie Koty Bay opposite the Biological Station of Limnological Institute, Lake Baikal, Russia. Splash zone of the shore (about 50 cm above shoreline), sand. Collected on 25 June and 24 July 2010. Etymology . The specific epithet means ”large”, “big”. Description. Male. Body long and comparatively thin. Сuticle smooth, 8–10 µm thick at mid-body. Lips well developed. Labial region is not offset from the adjacent body. Labial and cephalic papillae conical, protruding. Cheilostom small. Stoma large and comparatively narrow. Its length 1.7–2.1 times is more than its width. Stoma walls strongly cuticularized. Stoma 1.5–1.8 times as long as labial region diameter. Large dorsal tooth located in anterior portion of stoma, its apex situated at 84–90 % from base of stoma. Opposite the dorsal tooth, two longitudinal ridges are present. Two transverse ribs extend from the anterior edges of longitudinal ridges to level of dorsal tooth apex. Amphidial fovea located at the level of anterior portion of buccal cavity. Pharynx slender, muscular, comparatively long, slightly swollen proximally. Pharyngo-intestinal junction non-tuberculate. Reproductive system diorchic, testes opposed. Anterior testis straight, on the right of the intestine; posterior testis reflexed, on the right of the intestine. Spicules long, thin, ventrally curved and 2.9–3.8 times as long as cloacal body diameter as measured along the curved median line. Gubernaculum single, stick-shaped; 52–61 regularly spaced ventromedian supplements, in the form of short tubes, situated anterior to the cloaca. Tail slender, elongateconoid, curved ventrally, with 3–5 small papillae. Caudal glands well developed. Females . General morphology similar to that of males in the structure of cuticle and anterior body end. Stoma large, its length 1.7–2.1 times is more than its width. Large dorsal tooth in anterior portion of stoma. Two longitudinal ridges are present opposite dorsal tooth. Two transverse ribs extend from the anterior edges of the longitudinal ridges to level of dorsal tooth apex. Amphidial fovea located at the base of labial region, at the level of anterior portion of buccal cavity. Pharynx slender, muscular, comparatively long, slightly swollen proximally. Rectum 0.6–0.9 times as long as anal body diameter. Reproductive system didelphic, amphidelphic. Ovaries reflexed, tips generally not reaching the uterus-oviduct junction. Anterior ovary on right side and posterior ovary on left side of intestine. Terminal zone of oogonia arranged in one or two rows; growth zone with a single row of gradually enlarging oocytes. Vagina with muscular walls, occupying 36–45 % of the corresponding body width. Uterus spacious, filled with small rounded spermatozoa and containing 1– 4 eggs measuring 121–170 x 112–135 µm. Vulva a transverse slit, situated slightly posterior to mid-body. Vulval lips slightly protruding outside the body contour. Tail elongate-conoid, slightly curved ventrally. Caudal papillae absent. Caudal glands and spinneret present. Diagnosis . Body 6120–6940 µm long in males, 5926–7820 µm long in females. Cuticle smooth. Labial and cervical sensillae in the shape of papillae. Buccal cavity large, 97–120 µm long and 52–63 µm wide. Dorsal tooth large, its apex situated at 84–90 % from base of buccal cavity. Opposite dorsal tooth two longitudinal ridges are present. Two transverse ribs extend from anterior edges of longitudinal ridges to level of dorsal tooth apex. Stoma 1.5–1.9 times as long as labial region diameter. Uterus spacious, containing one to four eggs measuring 121–170 x 112–135 µm. Spicules 410–475 µm long, thin, curved ventrally. Gubernaculum single, stick-shaped. Precloacal supplements in the shape of short tubes, 52–61 in number, regularly spaced. Differential diagnosis . Paramononchus major sp. n. is the largest species of the genus Paramononchus . It is closest in body size to P. orientalis Gagarin & Naumova, 2012, but differs by being even longer ( L = 5926–7820 µm vs L = 3081–3778 µm in P. orientalis ), having longer spicules (410–475 µm vs 208–238 µm long in P. orientalis ) and a greater number of male precloacal supplements (52–61 vs 21–24 in P. orientalis ) (Gagarin & Naumova 2012 c). At present, the genus Paramononchus Mulvey, 1978 includes 6 valid species: P. arcticus Mulvey, 1978; P. alimovi Tsalolikhin, 1990, P. thiocrenobius (Soos, 1943) (cyt. Pax & Soós, 1943), P. baikalensis Gagarin & Naumova, 2010, P. orientalis Gagarin & Naumova, 2012 and P. m aj or sp. n. (Gagarin & Naumova 2012 c, present article). Three species are found in Lake Baikal: P. baikalensis , P. orientalis, and P. major sp. n. A key for the identification of valid species of the genus Paramononchus is given below. : Published as part of Gagarin, Vladimir G. & Naumova, Tatyana V., 2016, Ethmolaimus riparius sp. n. and Paramononchus major sp. n. (Nematoda) from Lake Baikal, Russia, pp. 582-592 in Zootaxa 4098 (3) on pages 587-591, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4098.3.10, http://zenodo.org/record/255076 : {"references": ["Gagarin, V. G. & Naumova, T. V. (2012 c) Paramononchus orientalis sp. n. and Ethmolaimus maximus sp. n. (Nematoda) from Lake Baikal, Russia. Zootaxa, 3513, 51 - 60.", "Mulvey, R. H. (1978) Predaceous nematodes of the family Mononchidae from the Mackenzie and Porcupine river systems and Somerset Island. N. W. T., Canada. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 56, 1847 - 1868.", "Tsalolikhin, S. Ya. (1990) On the fauna of freshwater mononchids (Nematoda, Mononchida) of Holarctic. Works of Inland Water Biology Institute (Academy of Sciences of the USSR), 64 (67), 54 - 58 [in Russian]", "Pax, F. & Soos, A. (1943) Die Nematoden der deutschen Schwefelquellen und Thermen. Archiv fur Hydrobiologie, 40, 123 - 183.", "Gagarin, V. G. & Naumova, T. V. (2010) Three new species of free-living nematodes from Lake Baikal, Russia. International Journal of Nematology, 20, 141 - 149."]}
format Text
author Gagarin, Vladimir G.
Naumova, Tatyana V.
author_facet Gagarin, Vladimir G.
Naumova, Tatyana V.
author_sort Gagarin, Vladimir G.
title Paramononchus major Gagarin & Naumova, 2016, sp. n.
title_short Paramononchus major Gagarin & Naumova, 2016, sp. n.
title_full Paramononchus major Gagarin & Naumova, 2016, sp. n.
title_fullStr Paramononchus major Gagarin & Naumova, 2016, sp. n.
title_full_unstemmed Paramononchus major Gagarin & Naumova, 2016, sp. n.
title_sort paramononchus major gagarin & naumova, 2016, sp. n.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2016
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5617446
https://zenodo.org/record/5617446
long_lat ENVELOPE(-93.500,-93.500,73.251,73.251)
geographic Canada
Somerset Island
geographic_facet Canada
Somerset Island
genre Porcupine River
Somerset Island
genre_facet Porcupine River
Somerset Island
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5617446
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5617446 2023-05-15T18:03:07+02:00 Paramononchus major Gagarin & Naumova, 2016, sp. n. Gagarin, Vladimir G. Naumova, Tatyana V. 2016 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5617446 https://zenodo.org/record/5617446 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/255076 http://publication.plazi.org/id/1027FF853840FFC2FFC528767D52FF93 http://zoobank.org/F2C7E7F0-8495-47EB-90EF-0732CF368895 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4098.3.10 http://zenodo.org/record/255076 http://publication.plazi.org/id/1027FF853840FFC2FFC528767D52FF93 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.255079 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.255080 http://zoobank.org/F2C7E7F0-8495-47EB-90EF-0732CF368895 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5617447 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Nematoda Adenophorea Dorylaimida Mononchidae Paramononchus Paramononchus major Taxonomic treatment article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle 2016 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5617446 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4098.3.10 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.255079 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.255080 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5617447 2022-02-08T12:40:44Z Paramononchus major sp. n. (Fig. 3, 4; Table 2) Type material. Holotype male, slide references number 102 / 51, deposited in the museum collection of the Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Center for Parasitology, Russian Academy of Sciences (Moscow, Russia). Paratypes . Six males and twelve females deposited in the collection of the Limnological Institute, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences (Irkutsk, Russia). Measurements. Table 2. Type locality. Bolshie Koty Bay opposite the Biological Station of Limnological Institute, Lake Baikal, Russia. Splash zone of the shore (about 50 cm above shoreline), sand. Collected on 25 June and 24 July 2010. Etymology . The specific epithet means ”large”, “big”. Description. Male. Body long and comparatively thin. Сuticle smooth, 8–10 µm thick at mid-body. Lips well developed. Labial region is not offset from the adjacent body. Labial and cephalic papillae conical, protruding. Cheilostom small. Stoma large and comparatively narrow. Its length 1.7–2.1 times is more than its width. Stoma walls strongly cuticularized. Stoma 1.5–1.8 times as long as labial region diameter. Large dorsal tooth located in anterior portion of stoma, its apex situated at 84–90 % from base of stoma. Opposite the dorsal tooth, two longitudinal ridges are present. Two transverse ribs extend from the anterior edges of longitudinal ridges to level of dorsal tooth apex. Amphidial fovea located at the level of anterior portion of buccal cavity. Pharynx slender, muscular, comparatively long, slightly swollen proximally. Pharyngo-intestinal junction non-tuberculate. Reproductive system diorchic, testes opposed. Anterior testis straight, on the right of the intestine; posterior testis reflexed, on the right of the intestine. Spicules long, thin, ventrally curved and 2.9–3.8 times as long as cloacal body diameter as measured along the curved median line. Gubernaculum single, stick-shaped; 52–61 regularly spaced ventromedian supplements, in the form of short tubes, situated anterior to the cloaca. Tail slender, elongateconoid, curved ventrally, with 3–5 small papillae. Caudal glands well developed. Females . General morphology similar to that of males in the structure of cuticle and anterior body end. Stoma large, its length 1.7–2.1 times is more than its width. Large dorsal tooth in anterior portion of stoma. Two longitudinal ridges are present opposite dorsal tooth. Two transverse ribs extend from the anterior edges of the longitudinal ridges to level of dorsal tooth apex. Amphidial fovea located at the base of labial region, at the level of anterior portion of buccal cavity. Pharynx slender, muscular, comparatively long, slightly swollen proximally. Rectum 0.6–0.9 times as long as anal body diameter. Reproductive system didelphic, amphidelphic. Ovaries reflexed, tips generally not reaching the uterus-oviduct junction. Anterior ovary on right side and posterior ovary on left side of intestine. Terminal zone of oogonia arranged in one or two rows; growth zone with a single row of gradually enlarging oocytes. Vagina with muscular walls, occupying 36–45 % of the corresponding body width. Uterus spacious, filled with small rounded spermatozoa and containing 1– 4 eggs measuring 121–170 x 112–135 µm. Vulva a transverse slit, situated slightly posterior to mid-body. Vulval lips slightly protruding outside the body contour. Tail elongate-conoid, slightly curved ventrally. Caudal papillae absent. Caudal glands and spinneret present. Diagnosis . Body 6120–6940 µm long in males, 5926–7820 µm long in females. Cuticle smooth. Labial and cervical sensillae in the shape of papillae. Buccal cavity large, 97–120 µm long and 52–63 µm wide. Dorsal tooth large, its apex situated at 84–90 % from base of buccal cavity. Opposite dorsal tooth two longitudinal ridges are present. Two transverse ribs extend from anterior edges of longitudinal ridges to level of dorsal tooth apex. Stoma 1.5–1.9 times as long as labial region diameter. Uterus spacious, containing one to four eggs measuring 121–170 x 112–135 µm. Spicules 410–475 µm long, thin, curved ventrally. Gubernaculum single, stick-shaped. Precloacal supplements in the shape of short tubes, 52–61 in number, regularly spaced. Differential diagnosis . Paramononchus major sp. n. is the largest species of the genus Paramononchus . It is closest in body size to P. orientalis Gagarin & Naumova, 2012, but differs by being even longer ( L = 5926–7820 µm vs L = 3081–3778 µm in P. orientalis ), having longer spicules (410–475 µm vs 208–238 µm long in P. orientalis ) and a greater number of male precloacal supplements (52–61 vs 21–24 in P. orientalis ) (Gagarin & Naumova 2012 c). At present, the genus Paramononchus Mulvey, 1978 includes 6 valid species: P. arcticus Mulvey, 1978; P. alimovi Tsalolikhin, 1990, P. thiocrenobius (Soos, 1943) (cyt. Pax & Soós, 1943), P. baikalensis Gagarin & Naumova, 2010, P. orientalis Gagarin & Naumova, 2012 and P. m aj or sp. n. (Gagarin & Naumova 2012 c, present article). Three species are found in Lake Baikal: P. baikalensis , P. orientalis, and P. major sp. n. A key for the identification of valid species of the genus Paramononchus is given below. : Published as part of Gagarin, Vladimir G. & Naumova, Tatyana V., 2016, Ethmolaimus riparius sp. n. and Paramononchus major sp. n. (Nematoda) from Lake Baikal, Russia, pp. 582-592 in Zootaxa 4098 (3) on pages 587-591, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4098.3.10, http://zenodo.org/record/255076 : {"references": ["Gagarin, V. G. & Naumova, T. V. (2012 c) Paramononchus orientalis sp. n. and Ethmolaimus maximus sp. n. (Nematoda) from Lake Baikal, Russia. Zootaxa, 3513, 51 - 60.", "Mulvey, R. H. (1978) Predaceous nematodes of the family Mononchidae from the Mackenzie and Porcupine river systems and Somerset Island. N. W. T., Canada. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 56, 1847 - 1868.", "Tsalolikhin, S. Ya. (1990) On the fauna of freshwater mononchids (Nematoda, Mononchida) of Holarctic. Works of Inland Water Biology Institute (Academy of Sciences of the USSR), 64 (67), 54 - 58 [in Russian]", "Pax, F. & Soos, A. (1943) Die Nematoden der deutschen Schwefelquellen und Thermen. Archiv fur Hydrobiologie, 40, 123 - 183.", "Gagarin, V. G. & Naumova, T. V. (2010) Three new species of free-living nematodes from Lake Baikal, Russia. International Journal of Nematology, 20, 141 - 149."]} Text Porcupine River Somerset Island DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Canada Somerset Island ENVELOPE(-93.500,-93.500,73.251,73.251)