Notopentorchis vesiculigera Baer 1959

Notopentorchis vesiculigera (Krabbe, 1882) Baer, 1959 (Figs. 1B, 4, 5) Host: Apus affinis (J.A. Gray) (Apodiformes, Apodidae). Site: small intestine. Locality: Nesting colony on the building of the Centre International de Recherches Médicales de Franceville, Republic of Gabon, 01°36’59.8”S, 13°34’55...

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Main Author: Georgiev, Boyko B.
Format: Text
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Published: Zenodo 2017
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6023004
https://zenodo.org/record/6023004
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6023004
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
Cestoda
Cyclophyllidea
Paruterinidae
Notopentorchis
Notopentorchis vesiculigera
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Platyhelminthes
Cestoda
Cyclophyllidea
Paruterinidae
Notopentorchis
Notopentorchis vesiculigera
Georgiev, Boyko B.
Notopentorchis vesiculigera Baer 1959
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Platyhelminthes
Cestoda
Cyclophyllidea
Paruterinidae
Notopentorchis
Notopentorchis vesiculigera
description Notopentorchis vesiculigera (Krabbe, 1882) Baer, 1959 (Figs. 1B, 4, 5) Host: Apus affinis (J.A. Gray) (Apodiformes, Apodidae). Site: small intestine. Locality: Nesting colony on the building of the Centre International de Recherches Médicales de Franceville, Republic of Gabon, 01°36’59.8”S, 13°34’55.9”E. Prevalence: 33%. Mean intensity: 2.0. Specimens studied: 8 specimens, including 4 entire specimens, 2 specimens without scoleces and two scoleces in Berlese’s medium. Voucher specimens: MHNG-PLAT-96109, USNM 1422221–1422222, IBER-BAS CES 20170530.18–20. Description: Body ribbon-shaped, gradually becoming wider in posterior part (Fig. 1B). Maximum length of gravid specimens 49 mm (n=1), maximum width 1.15–1.38 mm (1.26 mm, n=3). Scolex rounded, apical part gradually narrowing, conical (Fig. 4A); maximum width at level of suckers, 337–381 (363, n=4). Rostellum sucker-like, with diameter 161–208 (182, n=4); longitudinal muscular fibres present within rostellum. Rostellar hooks 56–70 (64, n=5) in number, regularly alternating in two rows; anterior and posterior hooks of different size and shape. Anterior hooks 45–49 (47, n=24) long (Fig. 4B), length of guard 7 (n=2), length of blade 17 (n=2), length of handle 20–22 (n=2). Posterior hooks 25–30 (27, n=17) long (Fig. 4C), length of handle 7–10 (8, n=3), blade 10–11 (n=5), base 18 (18, n=2). Suckers oval, with well-developed musculature; diameter 203–242 (219, n=5). Neck 79–247 (168, n=4) wide, not clearly distinguished from scolex; proglottisation begins at 485–530 (503, n=4) from posterior margin of suckers. Fully-developed strobila consisting of 342 proglottides: 147 juvenile, 42 premature, 55 mature, 70 post-mature, 15 pre-gravid and 13 gravid. Proglottides craspedote. Mature proglottides wider than long in proportion c.1:4. Gravid proglottides wider than long in proportion c.1:2. Genital pores irregularly alternating in short series, i.e....3, 5, 1, 4, 1, 3, 3, 2, 3, 2, 2, 1, 1, 3, 2, 1, 2,… or…1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 5, 6, 1, 2, situated in middle of lateral margin of proglottis. Genital atrium simple (Fig. 4E), 12– 37 (17, n=28) deep, its orifice 5–30 (14, n=28) in diameter and base 5–22 (10, n=28) wide, surrounded by intensely stained glandular cells. Ventral osmoregulatory canals with diameter 12–47 (25, n=30), with transverse anastomosis along posterior margin of each proglottis. Dorsal osmoregulatory canals with diameter 5–12 (9, n=25), without anastomoses. Genital ducts ventral to osmoregulatory canals. Testes 12–15 (14, n=17) in number, situated in median field dorsally to female glands and may overlap osmoregulatory canals (Fig. 4D); diameter of testes 45–74 (60, n=6). External vas deferens with diameter 12–17 (13, n=30), coiled, forming compact body situated near anterior margin in poral lateral field and in poral anterior part of median field. Internal vas deferens coiled, with diameter 5–12 (8, n=30). Cirrus sac thick-walled, elongate, 101–161 (126, n=28) long and 25–54 (38, n=30) wide, oblique to lateral margin of proglottis (Fig. 4E). No evaginated cirrus in specimens available. Vitellarium compact, with irregular shape, 87–121 (102, n=20) wide, dorsal to ovary, adjacent to posterior margin of proglottis (Fig. 4D). Ovary reniform, compact, 208–307 (263, n=10) wide, occupying whole width of median field anteriorly and ventrally to vitellarium. Mehlis’ gland spherical or with irregular shape, with diameter 25–45 (34, n=20), antero-dorsal to vitellarium. Vagina thin-walled, with diameter 7–13 (10, n=29); vaginal lumen surrounded by thin cellular sheath (Fig. 4E); vagina passing posteriorly and opening postero-dorsally to orifice of cirrus sac; conductive part length 20–40 (29, n=4) and width 5–7 (6, n=4), slim, situated at crossing point of osmoregulatory canals and vagina. Seminal receptacle cylindrical, sigmoid, 25–30 (27, n=6) wide. Uterus starts developing simultaneously with female glands, initially as thin-walled transversely-elongate sac situated antero-dorsally to ovary (Fig. 4D), almost as dorsal as testes in mature proglottides. With increasing size of uterus, testes pushed out laterally and dorsally, and uterus gradually occupying entire medium field (Fig. 5A). Uterine walls forming internal outgrowths in post-mature proglottides; simultaneously, paruterine organ starts developing as a densification of medullar parenchyma situated anteriorly to uterus (Fig. 5B). In pre-gravid and gravid proglottides, lateral and posterior uterine walls become irregular, forming large outgrowths, with eggs situated between them (Fig. 5C). In some specimens, majority of eggs situated in anterior part of uterus embraced by paruterine organ in last gravid proglottides. External shell of eggs (Fig. 4F) thin, with irregular shape, 37–62 (48, n=21) wide. Oncospheres with diameter 25–35 (30, n=22). Embryonic hooks: median pair 20–27 (22, n=22) long, internal lateral pair 15–20 (17, n=22) long and external lateral pair 10–12 (11, n=17) long. B A C D А B C Remarks. The present material belongs to the second group of species of Notopentorchis (defined above) characterised by a larger body, anterior rostellar hooks with a shape differing from that of the posterior rostellar hooks and considerably longer than them, an elongate cirrus sac and a transversely elongate developing uterus (Table 2). On the basis of their morphology, our specimens belong to N. vesiculigera . This species is a widespread parasite of swifts in temperate latitudes of Eurasia: Denmark (Krabbe 1882), Ukraine (Kornyushin 1989), the European part of Russia (Dogiel & Karolinskaya 1936) and the Russian Far East (Krotov 1952; Oshmarin 1963). There is also a record from Apus caffer from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Baer 1959), which is accompanied with brief morphological data, i.e. 50 rostellar hooks with length 50 µm and 29 µm. In the same paper, Baer (1959) considered Biuterina dikeniensis Mokhehle, 1951 from A. caffer from the Republic of South Africa, erroneously cited by Baer (1959) and Georgiev & Bray (1991) as Sphaeruterina dikeniensis , as a synonym of N. vesiculigera . The records of N. vesiculigera from Switzerland (Fuhrmann 1926), France (Joyeux & Baer 1936) and Spain (López-Neyra 1944), accompanied with descriptions, do not fit with the description of N. vesiculigera and should be related to the other widespread Palaearctic species, N. iduncula . The present material fits very well with the descriptions of N. vesiculigera provided by Krabbe (1882) and Kornyushin (1989), both from Apus apus , including relative to the metrical data (Table 2). We report N. vesiculigera from Apus affinis for the first time. : Published as part of Georgiev, Boyko B., 2017, Redescriptions of four Palaeotropical species of the cestode genus Notopentorchis Burt, 1938 (Cyclophyllidea: Paruterinidae), pp. 61-82 in Zootaxa 4290 (1) on pages 70-73, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4290.1.3, http://zenodo.org/record/1010418 : {"references": ["Krabbe, H. (1882) Nye Bidrag til Kundskab om Fuglenes Baendelorme. Vidensk. Selsk. Skr., 6 Raekke, Naturvidenskabelig og Mathematisk Afdeling I, 7, 349 - 366.", "Baer, J. - G. (1959) Helminthes parasites. In: Explorations des Parcs Nationaux du Congo Belge, Fasc. 1, Brussels, 163 pp.", "Kornyushin, V. V. (1989) [Fauna of Ukraine. Volume 33. Monogenea and Cestoda. Part 3. Davaineoidea, Biuterinoidea, Paruterinoidea.] Naukova Dumka, Kiev, 252 pp. (In Russian)", "Dogiel, V. A. & Karolinskaya, K. N. (1936) [Parasite fauna of swifts.] Uchenye Zapiski Leningradskogo Universiteta, 3, 49 - 79. (In Russian)", "Krotov, A. I. (1952) [New cestodes (Hymenolepididae and Paruterinidae) from birds.] Trudy Gel'mintologischeskoy Laboratorii Akademii Nauk SSSR, 6, 259 - 272. (In Russian)", "Oshmarin, P. G. (1963) [Parasitic worms of mammals and birds in Primor'e region.] Izdatel'stvo Akademii Nauk SSSR, Moscow, 323 pp. (In Russian)", "Mokhehle, C. N. C. (1951) Parasites of the swift Cafrapus caffer caffer (Roberts) with descriptions of one new genus and eight new species. Fort Hare Papers, 1, 326 - 383.", "Georgiev, B. B. & Bray, R. A. (1991) Notopentorchis cyathiformis (Frolich, 1791) n. comb. and N. iduncula (Spassky, 1946) (Cestoda: Paruterinidae) from Palaearctic swifts (Aves: Apodiformes), with a review of the genus Notopentorchis Burt, 1938. Systematic Parasitology, 20, 121 - 133.", "Fuhrmann, O. (1926) Catalogue des Invertebres de la Suisse. 17. Cestodes. Georg & C ie, Geneve, 149 pp.", "Joyeux, C. & Baer, J. - G. (1936) Faune de France. 30. Cestodes. Paul Lechevalier et Fils, Paris, 613 pp.", "Lopez-Neyra, C. R. (1944) Compendio de Helmintologia Iberica (Continuacion). Parte II. Capitulo III. Revista Iberica de Parasitologia, 4, 209 - 313."]}
format Text
author Georgiev, Boyko B.
author_facet Georgiev, Boyko B.
author_sort Georgiev, Boyko B.
title Notopentorchis vesiculigera Baer 1959
title_short Notopentorchis vesiculigera Baer 1959
title_full Notopentorchis vesiculigera Baer 1959
title_fullStr Notopentorchis vesiculigera Baer 1959
title_full_unstemmed Notopentorchis vesiculigera Baer 1959
title_sort notopentorchis vesiculigera baer 1959
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2017
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6023004
https://zenodo.org/record/6023004
long_lat ENVELOPE(-114.067,-114.067,-74.833,-74.833)
ENVELOPE(9.650,9.650,-71.750,-71.750)
ENVELOPE(-63.567,-63.567,-64.850,-64.850)
geographic Bray
Leningradskogo Universiteta
Lopez
geographic_facet Bray
Leningradskogo Universiteta
Lopez
genre Apus apus
genre_facet Apus apus
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6023004 2023-05-15T14:17:19+02:00 Notopentorchis vesiculigera Baer 1959 Georgiev, Boyko B. 2017 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6023004 https://zenodo.org/record/6023004 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/1010418 http://publication.plazi.org/id/94066857FF81FF869814FFFAFFBDFF9D http://zoobank.org/60F8E0C2-1B2D-4C56-B5E6-B4AEB1E74370 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4290.1.3 http://zenodo.org/record/1010418 http://publication.plazi.org/id/94066857FF81FF869814FFFAFFBDFF9D https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1010420 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1010426 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1010428 http://zoobank.org/60F8E0C2-1B2D-4C56-B5E6-B4AEB1E74370 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6023005 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Platyhelminthes Cestoda Cyclophyllidea Paruterinidae Notopentorchis Notopentorchis vesiculigera article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2017 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6023004 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4290.1.3 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1010420 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1010426 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1010428 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6023005 2022-04-01T09:30:31Z Notopentorchis vesiculigera (Krabbe, 1882) Baer, 1959 (Figs. 1B, 4, 5) Host: Apus affinis (J.A. Gray) (Apodiformes, Apodidae). Site: small intestine. Locality: Nesting colony on the building of the Centre International de Recherches Médicales de Franceville, Republic of Gabon, 01°36’59.8”S, 13°34’55.9”E. Prevalence: 33%. Mean intensity: 2.0. Specimens studied: 8 specimens, including 4 entire specimens, 2 specimens without scoleces and two scoleces in Berlese’s medium. Voucher specimens: MHNG-PLAT-96109, USNM 1422221–1422222, IBER-BAS CES 20170530.18–20. Description: Body ribbon-shaped, gradually becoming wider in posterior part (Fig. 1B). Maximum length of gravid specimens 49 mm (n=1), maximum width 1.15–1.38 mm (1.26 mm, n=3). Scolex rounded, apical part gradually narrowing, conical (Fig. 4A); maximum width at level of suckers, 337–381 (363, n=4). Rostellum sucker-like, with diameter 161–208 (182, n=4); longitudinal muscular fibres present within rostellum. Rostellar hooks 56–70 (64, n=5) in number, regularly alternating in two rows; anterior and posterior hooks of different size and shape. Anterior hooks 45–49 (47, n=24) long (Fig. 4B), length of guard 7 (n=2), length of blade 17 (n=2), length of handle 20–22 (n=2). Posterior hooks 25–30 (27, n=17) long (Fig. 4C), length of handle 7–10 (8, n=3), blade 10–11 (n=5), base 18 (18, n=2). Suckers oval, with well-developed musculature; diameter 203–242 (219, n=5). Neck 79–247 (168, n=4) wide, not clearly distinguished from scolex; proglottisation begins at 485–530 (503, n=4) from posterior margin of suckers. Fully-developed strobila consisting of 342 proglottides: 147 juvenile, 42 premature, 55 mature, 70 post-mature, 15 pre-gravid and 13 gravid. Proglottides craspedote. Mature proglottides wider than long in proportion c.1:4. Gravid proglottides wider than long in proportion c.1:2. Genital pores irregularly alternating in short series, i.e....3, 5, 1, 4, 1, 3, 3, 2, 3, 2, 2, 1, 1, 3, 2, 1, 2,… or…1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 5, 6, 1, 2, situated in middle of lateral margin of proglottis. Genital atrium simple (Fig. 4E), 12– 37 (17, n=28) deep, its orifice 5–30 (14, n=28) in diameter and base 5–22 (10, n=28) wide, surrounded by intensely stained glandular cells. Ventral osmoregulatory canals with diameter 12–47 (25, n=30), with transverse anastomosis along posterior margin of each proglottis. Dorsal osmoregulatory canals with diameter 5–12 (9, n=25), without anastomoses. Genital ducts ventral to osmoregulatory canals. Testes 12–15 (14, n=17) in number, situated in median field dorsally to female glands and may overlap osmoregulatory canals (Fig. 4D); diameter of testes 45–74 (60, n=6). External vas deferens with diameter 12–17 (13, n=30), coiled, forming compact body situated near anterior margin in poral lateral field and in poral anterior part of median field. Internal vas deferens coiled, with diameter 5–12 (8, n=30). Cirrus sac thick-walled, elongate, 101–161 (126, n=28) long and 25–54 (38, n=30) wide, oblique to lateral margin of proglottis (Fig. 4E). No evaginated cirrus in specimens available. Vitellarium compact, with irregular shape, 87–121 (102, n=20) wide, dorsal to ovary, adjacent to posterior margin of proglottis (Fig. 4D). Ovary reniform, compact, 208–307 (263, n=10) wide, occupying whole width of median field anteriorly and ventrally to vitellarium. Mehlis’ gland spherical or with irregular shape, with diameter 25–45 (34, n=20), antero-dorsal to vitellarium. Vagina thin-walled, with diameter 7–13 (10, n=29); vaginal lumen surrounded by thin cellular sheath (Fig. 4E); vagina passing posteriorly and opening postero-dorsally to orifice of cirrus sac; conductive part length 20–40 (29, n=4) and width 5–7 (6, n=4), slim, situated at crossing point of osmoregulatory canals and vagina. Seminal receptacle cylindrical, sigmoid, 25–30 (27, n=6) wide. Uterus starts developing simultaneously with female glands, initially as thin-walled transversely-elongate sac situated antero-dorsally to ovary (Fig. 4D), almost as dorsal as testes in mature proglottides. With increasing size of uterus, testes pushed out laterally and dorsally, and uterus gradually occupying entire medium field (Fig. 5A). Uterine walls forming internal outgrowths in post-mature proglottides; simultaneously, paruterine organ starts developing as a densification of medullar parenchyma situated anteriorly to uterus (Fig. 5B). In pre-gravid and gravid proglottides, lateral and posterior uterine walls become irregular, forming large outgrowths, with eggs situated between them (Fig. 5C). In some specimens, majority of eggs situated in anterior part of uterus embraced by paruterine organ in last gravid proglottides. External shell of eggs (Fig. 4F) thin, with irregular shape, 37–62 (48, n=21) wide. Oncospheres with diameter 25–35 (30, n=22). Embryonic hooks: median pair 20–27 (22, n=22) long, internal lateral pair 15–20 (17, n=22) long and external lateral pair 10–12 (11, n=17) long. B A C D А B C Remarks. The present material belongs to the second group of species of Notopentorchis (defined above) characterised by a larger body, anterior rostellar hooks with a shape differing from that of the posterior rostellar hooks and considerably longer than them, an elongate cirrus sac and a transversely elongate developing uterus (Table 2). On the basis of their morphology, our specimens belong to N. vesiculigera . This species is a widespread parasite of swifts in temperate latitudes of Eurasia: Denmark (Krabbe 1882), Ukraine (Kornyushin 1989), the European part of Russia (Dogiel & Karolinskaya 1936) and the Russian Far East (Krotov 1952; Oshmarin 1963). There is also a record from Apus caffer from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Baer 1959), which is accompanied with brief morphological data, i.e. 50 rostellar hooks with length 50 µm and 29 µm. In the same paper, Baer (1959) considered Biuterina dikeniensis Mokhehle, 1951 from A. caffer from the Republic of South Africa, erroneously cited by Baer (1959) and Georgiev & Bray (1991) as Sphaeruterina dikeniensis , as a synonym of N. vesiculigera . The records of N. vesiculigera from Switzerland (Fuhrmann 1926), France (Joyeux & Baer 1936) and Spain (López-Neyra 1944), accompanied with descriptions, do not fit with the description of N. vesiculigera and should be related to the other widespread Palaearctic species, N. iduncula . The present material fits very well with the descriptions of N. vesiculigera provided by Krabbe (1882) and Kornyushin (1989), both from Apus apus , including relative to the metrical data (Table 2). We report N. vesiculigera from Apus affinis for the first time. : Published as part of Georgiev, Boyko B., 2017, Redescriptions of four Palaeotropical species of the cestode genus Notopentorchis Burt, 1938 (Cyclophyllidea: Paruterinidae), pp. 61-82 in Zootaxa 4290 (1) on pages 70-73, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4290.1.3, http://zenodo.org/record/1010418 : {"references": ["Krabbe, H. (1882) Nye Bidrag til Kundskab om Fuglenes Baendelorme. Vidensk. Selsk. Skr., 6 Raekke, Naturvidenskabelig og Mathematisk Afdeling I, 7, 349 - 366.", "Baer, J. - G. (1959) Helminthes parasites. In: Explorations des Parcs Nationaux du Congo Belge, Fasc. 1, Brussels, 163 pp.", "Kornyushin, V. V. (1989) [Fauna of Ukraine. Volume 33. Monogenea and Cestoda. Part 3. Davaineoidea, Biuterinoidea, Paruterinoidea.] Naukova Dumka, Kiev, 252 pp. (In Russian)", "Dogiel, V. A. & Karolinskaya, K. N. (1936) [Parasite fauna of swifts.] Uchenye Zapiski Leningradskogo Universiteta, 3, 49 - 79. (In Russian)", "Krotov, A. I. (1952) [New cestodes (Hymenolepididae and Paruterinidae) from birds.] Trudy Gel'mintologischeskoy Laboratorii Akademii Nauk SSSR, 6, 259 - 272. (In Russian)", "Oshmarin, P. G. (1963) [Parasitic worms of mammals and birds in Primor'e region.] Izdatel'stvo Akademii Nauk SSSR, Moscow, 323 pp. (In Russian)", "Mokhehle, C. N. C. (1951) Parasites of the swift Cafrapus caffer caffer (Roberts) with descriptions of one new genus and eight new species. Fort Hare Papers, 1, 326 - 383.", "Georgiev, B. B. & Bray, R. A. (1991) Notopentorchis cyathiformis (Frolich, 1791) n. comb. and N. iduncula (Spassky, 1946) (Cestoda: Paruterinidae) from Palaearctic swifts (Aves: Apodiformes), with a review of the genus Notopentorchis Burt, 1938. Systematic Parasitology, 20, 121 - 133.", "Fuhrmann, O. (1926) Catalogue des Invertebres de la Suisse. 17. Cestodes. Georg & C ie, Geneve, 149 pp.", "Joyeux, C. & Baer, J. - G. (1936) Faune de France. 30. Cestodes. Paul Lechevalier et Fils, Paris, 613 pp.", "Lopez-Neyra, C. R. (1944) Compendio de Helmintologia Iberica (Continuacion). Parte II. Capitulo III. Revista Iberica de Parasitologia, 4, 209 - 313."]} Text Apus apus DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Bray ENVELOPE(-114.067,-114.067,-74.833,-74.833) Leningradskogo Universiteta ENVELOPE(9.650,9.650,-71.750,-71.750) Lopez ENVELOPE(-63.567,-63.567,-64.850,-64.850)