Laimaphelenchus persicus Asghari, Pourjam, Heydari & Zhao, 2012, n. sp.

Laimaphelenchus persicus n. sp. (Figs 1–3) Measurements. Table 1. Material examined. The description presented here is based on measurements of 18 ♀s and seven ♂s; Gorgan, Golestan province, north of Iran (GPS coordinates: N 36 ° 49 ', E 54 ° 23 '). Extracted from bark...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Asghari, Ramazan, Pourjam, Ebrahim, Heydari, Ramin, Zhao, Zeng Qi
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2012
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5662304
https://zenodo.org/record/5662304
Description
Summary:Laimaphelenchus persicus n. sp. (Figs 1–3) Measurements. Table 1. Material examined. The description presented here is based on measurements of 18 ♀s and seven ♂s; Gorgan, Golestan province, north of Iran (GPS coordinates: N 36 ° 49 ', E 54 ° 23 '). Extracted from bark of a dead pine ( Pinus sylvestris ) in the Hezarpich region. Coll. Ramazan Asghari, in May and June 2010. Holotype female, ten paratype females and four males deposited in the Nematode Collection of the Faculty of Agriculture, University of Tarbiat Modares, Tehran, Iran (slide no, LP 0012,1–LP 0012,4). Vouchers (collection data as above): Five paratype females and two males deposited at the National Nematode Collection, New Zealand (NNCNZ). Three paratype females and one male deposited in the Canadian National Nematode Collection, Ottawa, Canada. Description. Female. Body ventrally arcuate in heat relaxed specimens. Cuticle with fine transverse annulations about 1.4–1.8 µm apart at mid-body. Lateral fields with 4 incisures, inner 2 incisures closer together than outer pair, not areolate, extending to origin of tubercle. Head region rounded, slightly offset, and slightly wider than body at base, 3–3.5 µm high and 6–7.5 µm wide. Cephalids not seen. Stylet slender with small basal swellings. Procorpus cylindrical, 40–43 µm long, median bulb rounded to oval, 16–20 μm long, 11.5–13 μm wide with crescentic valves centrally, located 56–68 μm from the anterior end; isthmus 37–44 µm long, encircled by nerve ring at about its mid-length. Nerve ring located anterior to excretory pore. Excretory pore conspicuous. Hemizonid not seen. Pharyngeal glands overlapping intestine on dorsal side, extending for 51–85 μm. Reproductive system with outstretched ovary with oocytes in single file; conspicuous spermatheca filled with sperm cells; vagina sloping anteriorly, with massive sclerotization (Fig. 1 F, G). Post-vulval uterine sac (PUS) occupying 46–75 % of distance from vulva to anus. Vulva with well-developed anterior vulval flap (Fig. 2 C). Tail conoid, ventrally curved, with a single stalk-like terminus and four pedunculate tubercles ending with 4–6 finger-like protrusions which curve towards body. Male. Morphology similar to that of female. Testis outstretched, spermatocytes in a single column. Spicules paired, rosethorn–shaped, with prominent capitulum and rostrum broad with bluntly rounded tip. No gubernaculum present. Caudal papillae located at three positions: first pair preanal subventral, second pair postanal subventral, at about 48–62 % of distance between cloacal aperture to tail tip and third pair subventrally, very small, in some specimens obscure and at 78–81 % of distance between cloaca and tail tip (Fig. 2 E, F). Tail conoid, ventrally curved, with a single stalk-like terminus and four pedunculate tubercles ending with 4–6 finger-like protrusions which curve towards body. Diagnosis and Relationships. Laimaphelenchus persicus n. sp. is characterised by having a distinct tail shape with an offset terminus, with 4 clearly pedunculate tubercles ending in 4–6 finger-like protrusions which curve towards the nematode body in both sexes; lateral fields with four lines; female with vulval flap; male with three pairs of caudal papillae, one pair pre-anal subventral, one pair post-anal subventral at 40–62 % of distance between cloaca and tail end and one small pair anterior to tail terminus at 78–81 % of distance between cloaca and tail tip. The species in the genus Laimaphelenchus are divided into those with and those without a vulval flap (Baujard 1981; Hunt 1993). Laimaphelenchus persicus n. sp. belongs to the first group, bringing its members to nine. The other species in this group are L. penardi, L. deconincki, L. pensobrinus, L. cocuccii, L. unituberculus, L. helicosoma, L. preissii and L. simlaensis. Laimaphelenchus persicus n. sp. is morphologically close to L. penardi, L. pensobrinus, L. deconincki, L. phloesini, L. pini, L. australis, L. cocuccii, L. pannocaudus and L. patulus . L. persicus n. sp. differs from L. penardi by having a shorter stylet (10–11.5 vs 13–14 μm), smaller b value (6.5–8 vs 9–11), different number of incisures in lateral field (4 vs 2) and the form of the cuticle surrounding the vagina (thick vs thin) (Filipjev & Schuurmans Stekhoven, 1941); from L. pensobrinus by its longer body length (615–925 vs 610), smaller b value (6.5–8 vs 9–12), shorter female genital tract not reaching the pharynx vs longer genital tract, longer post–vulval uterine sac (100–162 μm or 46.1–75.5 % of distance from vulva to anus vs 84 μm or 29–46 % of distance from vulva to anus), shape of the cuticle surrounding the vagina (thick vs thin cuticularised tube), number of incisures in lateral field (4 vs 2) and shorter spicules (19–21 vs 33–37 μm) (Massey 1966); from L. deconincki by length of post-vulval uterine sac (100–162 vs 36–42 μm), number of incisures in lateral field (4 vs 3) and presence of males (Elmiligy & Geraert 1972); from L. cocuccii by number of incisures in lateral field (4 vs 3), longer post-vulval uterine sac (100–162 vs 40–64 μm), and presence of males (Doucet 1992). L. persicus n. sp. is separated from L. australis, L. pannocaudus , L. phloesini , L. pini , and L. patulus by having a vulval flap (Zhao et al . 2006 b; Massey 1966, 1974; Baujard 1981; Swart 1997). It is separated from L. unituberculus, L. helicosoma, L. preissii and L. simlaensis by tail shape (tail ending in a single stalk with 4 tubercles vs with one broad tubercle) (Bajaj & Walia 2000; Peneva & Chipev 1999; Zhao et al . 2006 a; Negi et al . 2009). Based on the LSU molecular phylogenetic studies (Fig. 4), L. persicus n. sp. differs genetically from all the Laimaphelenchus species with LSU sequences available in the GenBank. When compared with the two closest species, L. persicus n. sp. differed from L. preissii (accession number EU 287598) by 19.4 % (137 in 705 bp), and L. australis (accession number EU 287600) by 22.3 % (154 in 692 bp). Etymology. The species epithet “ persicus ” refers to the Latin name of Iran, the country of origin of this species. : Published as part of Asghari, Ramazan, Pourjam, Ebrahim, Heydari, Ramin & Zhao, Zeng Qi, 2012, Laimaphelenchus persicus n. sp. (Nematoda: Aphelenchoididae) from Iran, pp. 59-67 in Zootaxa 3325 on pages 60-65, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.210074 : {"references": ["Baujard, P. (1981) Revue taxonomic du genre Laimaphelenchus Fuchs, 1937 et description de Laimaphelenchus pini n. sp. Revue de Nematologie, 4, 75 - 92.", "Hunt, D. J. (1993) Aphelenchida, Longidoridae and Trichodoridae: Their Systematics and Bionomics. CAB International Wallingford.", "Filipjev, I. N. & Schuurmans Stekhoven Jr, J. H. (1941) A Manual of Agricultural Helminthology. E. J. Brill, Leiden, Netherlands, 878 pp.", "Massey, C. L. (1966) The nematode parasites and associates of Dendroctonus adjunctus (Coleoptera: Scolytidae) in New Mexico. Annals of the Entomological Society of America, 59, 424 - 440.", "Zhao, Z. Q., Davies, K. A., Riley, I. T. & Nobbs, J. M. (2006 b) Laimaphelenchus australis sp. nov. (Nematoda: Aphelenchina) from exotic pines, Pinus radiata and P. p i n a s t e r, in Australia. Zootaxa, 1248, 35 - 44.", "Massey, C. L. (1974) Biology and taxonomy of nematode parasites and associates of bark beetles in the United States. Agricultural Handbook No. 446, USDA, Forest Service, Washington, 233 pp.", "Swart, A. (1997) Description of Laimaphelenchus patulus sp. n. (Nematoda: Aphelenchoididae) from Pinus pinaster Ait. South Africa African Plant Protection, 3, 23 - 28.", "Bajaj, H. K. & Walia, K. K. (2000) A new species of Laimaphelenchus Fuchs, 1937 (Nematoda: Aphelenchina) from Kalesar forest, Haryana, India. Indian Journal of Nematology, 30, 88 - 90.", "Peneva, V. & Chipev, N. (1999) Laimaphelenchus helicosoma (Maslen, 1979) n. comb. (Nematoda: Aphelenchida) from the Livingston Island (the Antarctic). Bulgarian Antarctic Research Life Science, 2, 57 - 61.", "Zhao, Z. Q., Davies, K. A., Riley, I. T. & Nobbs, J. M. (2006 a) Laimaphelenchus preissii sp. nov. (Nematoda: Aphelenchina) from native pine Callitris preissii in South Australia. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia, 130, 10 - 16.", "Negi, S., Kalia, C. D., Walia, K. K. & Bajaj, K. H. (2009) New Species of Aphelenchoides Fischer and Laimaphelenchus Fuchs (Nematoda: Aphelenchida) from pine twigs, Himachal Pradesh, India. Indian Journal of Nematology, 39, 192 - 197."]}