The lizard Nothobachia ablephara is endemic to dune areas and sandy soils adjacent to the São Francisco River in semiarid northeastern Brazil. Forty-nine lizard specimens were collected in 2 Caatinga areas in the municipality of Petrolina in Pernambuco state. Three gastrointestinal helminth taxa were identified, the nematodes Parapharyngodon alvarengai and Physaloptera sp. and the cestode Oochoristica sp. Nothobachia ablephara showed low parasite richness, but high levels of infection by P. alvarengai. There were no significant differences between the parasitism rates of the 2 study areas or between male and female lizards. This is the first study on parasitism in N. ablephara, thereby increasing knowledge of parasite fauna that infect gymnophthalmid lizards in the Sertão of Brazil.
One species of Parapharyngodon Chatterji (Nematoda: Pharyngodonidae), parasitizing the large intestine of Tropidurus hispidus (Spix) (Squamata: Tropiduridae) in Caatinga biome from Brazil is described and illustrated . This new species differs from a part of its congeners by a set of characters in males: the presence of four pairs of caudal papillae, unpaired post cloacal papilla absent, and smooth anterior cloacal lip. Among the Parapharyngodon species with four pairs caudal papillae, unpaired post clocal papilla absent, and smooth cloacal lips, only P. hispidus n. sp. and P. jairaipurii Rizvi & Bursey (Oriental realm), features the same characteristics including sharp pointed tip of spicule, stout terminus or spike of tail of females, and punctate ornamentation of the eggshell. However, these two species are different by the size of spicules (spicules of P. jairaipuri are around 55% of the size spicules of P. hispidus n. sp.); and the arrangement of the caudal papillae (two pairs of adcloacal papillae in P. jaraipuri which are absent in P. hispidus n. sp.). Parapharyngodon hispidus n. sp. is the 55th species assigned to the genus and the 11th species of this genus described in Neotropical hosts.
We report the identification of helminths in Procellosaurinus erythrocercus, a lizard endemic to Brazilian Caatinga biome. Parasites that we found, such as Parapharyngodon sp. and Oochoristica sp., have not been reported in this host, which is under threat in its area of occurrence.
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