Paranoplocephala omphalodes

Paranoplocephala cf. omphalodes (Hermann, 1783) It has been recently shown that P. omphalodes sensu stricto is primarily a parasite of Microtus agrestis (L.) and M. arvalis (Pallas) in Europe and probably elsewhere in western Eurasia (Haukisalmi et al. 2004). There is another, rather host-specific s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Haukisalmi, Voitto, Henttonen, Heikki, Hardman, Lotta, Hardman, Michael, Laakkonen, Juha, Murueva, Galina, Niemimaa, Jukka, Shulunov, Stanislav, Vapalahti, Olli
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2009
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3792442
http://treatment.plazi.org/id/E06987C7FFED1B75FF2FFCF5FBE59DA5
Description
Summary:Paranoplocephala cf. omphalodes (Hermann, 1783) It has been recently shown that P. omphalodes sensu stricto is primarily a parasite of Microtus agrestis (L.) and M. arvalis (Pallas) in Europe and probably elsewhere in western Eurasia (Haukisalmi et al. 2004). There is another, rather host-specific species in M. oeconomus (i.e. Paranoplocephala jarrelli Haukisalmi, Henttonen & Hardman, 2006) that occurs in the root/tundra vole throughout its Holarctic range. The P. omphalodes - like taxon occurring in the eastern Beringian endemic Microtus miurus Osgood is also specifically distinct (i.e. Paranoplocephala batzlii Haukisalmi, Henttonen & Hardman, 2006; see Haukisalmi et al. 2006). The present molecular phylogenetic analysis shows unequivocally that the P. omphalodes -like cestodes in Buryatia do not represent the true P. omphalodes (Fig. 1). The Buryatian specimens form a monophyletic group that is sister to the divergent North Alaskan subclade of P. jarrelli . The topology and high statistical support of the tree suggests that these two clades are both independent species, forming a sister group for the true, Holarctic P. jarrelli . In the present material, the Buryatian P. cf. omphalodes occurred exclusively in Microtus fortis and M. oeconomus . Paranoplocephala omphalodes has earlier been report- ed from M. maximowiczii , M. oeconomus , Myodes rufocanus and Apodemus peninsulae in Buryatia and adjacent regions (Machul’skii 1958; Zhaltsanova 1992). The earlier Buryatian records of P. omphalodes from Myodes rufocanus probably represent another, recently described species (i.e. Paranoplocephala buryatiensis Haukisalmi, Hardman, Hardman, Laakkonen, Niemimaa & Henttonen, 2006; see below). Paranoplocephala cf. omphalodes from Buryatia may be primarily associated with the Asian Microtus species, i.e. M. fortis and M. maximowiczii , because it is not known from M. oeconomus outside Buryatia. Paranoplocephala cf. omphalodes will be later described as a new species. Paranoplocephala cf. omphalodes was present ...