Three species belonging to the genus Macrolaimus, namely M. canadensis, M. crucis and M. ruehmi, have been obtained from areas of natural vegetation in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Corsica (France), the Czech Republic and Spain. These three species are characterized by the body length of males and females, stomatal proportion of the gymnostom and cheilostom, excretory pore position, postvulval uterine sac length, male and female tail length and morphology, and the length and morphology of the spicules and gubernacula. The occurrence of M. crucis in Spain has, as a result of this study, now also been expanded to a larger area of the southern Iberian Peninsula. Morphological and morphometrical analyses showed that M. canadensis and M. ruehmi are very similar, sharing apomorphic characters. In contrast, M. crucis has plesiomorphic characters. Description, measurements and illustrations are provided for these three species.
Summary
Paracrobeles psammophilus from the type locality is redescribed based on SEM studies. In addition, material of P. psammophilus previously described from Sicily (Italy) is revised. Species of Paracrobeles are analysed and form two morphological groups: the laterellus-group with three species (P. kelsodunensis, P. laterellus and P. mojavicus) having a lip region with two guard processes at both primary and secondary axils and shorter and more robust spicules, and the psammophilus-group with two species (P. deserticola and P. psammophilus) having primary axils bearing two guard processes and secondary axils with only one guard process and longer and slender spicules. Another four species (Acrobelinema cornis, Cervidellus cancellatus, C. rarus and C. sonorensis), having an intermediate morphology between Paracrobeles and Nothacrobeles, are transferred to Nothacrobeles (= Acrobelinema n. syn.).
The nematode Nothacrobeles lanceolatus was described in arid soils from Cabo de Gata-Níjar Natural Park, province of Almería (Spain). Since then this species has not been found again. In this study, new data on the distribution and morphological, morphometrical and molecular characteristics (based on 18S and 28S ribosomal DNA) of N. lanceolatus is provided. This species is characterized by having a tessellated cuticle, with its inner layer bearing two rows of cuticular punctations per annulus, lips quadrangular with eight pinnae, labial probolae bifurcate with divergent prongs surrounded by pinnae, pharynx with corpus 2.5–4.0 times isthmus length, post-vulval uterine sac 1.4–2.2 times the corresponding body diameter, and female and male tails conical, bearing a conical mucro with acute terminus. The phylogenetic position of this and related species of the genus Nothacrobeles is discussed. Additionally, bacteria (Pasteuria) and fungi (Catenaria, Nematocida) feeding on N. lanceolatus are showed including light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy illustrations.
Two populations of the species Diastolaimus grossus have been obtained from bark of trees in Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Czech Republic. The species is described and characterized in detail using morphological techniques (light and electron scanning microscopy) and morphometrical (Gower General Similarity coefficient of morphological characters) and molecular analyses, including phylogenetic analysis of all related and already sequenced species of the family Chambersiellidae. Morphological and molecular analyses, based on 18S and 28S ribosomal DNA sequences, show that the family Chambersiellidae is polyphyletic, being the subfamily Chambersiellinae related with Cephalobomorpha and Tylenchomorpha, and the subfamily Macrolaiminae is located into Panagrolaimomorpha. The genus Diastolaimus, previously belonging to Macrolaiminae, is transferred to Chambersiellinae. Diastolaimus mexicanus is proposed as a junior synonym of D. grossus.
Summary
Three cryptic species of the genus Eucephalobus, collected from coastal dunes of Spain and wet areas of California and Vietnam, are studied. The objective of this study is the differentiation of those species of the genus Eucephalobus with a long tail, which can be confused with each other and especially with Eucephalobus oxyuroides. These species are E. compsus, E. hooperi and E. panaxi. Furthermore, Pseudacrobeles unguicolis, which is also confused with these species, has been studied. This study provides detailed morphological and morphometrical characterisation for the three species of Eucephalobus, including light and scanning electron microscopy illustrations. Molecular characterisation of E. hooperi, E. mucronatus, E. striatus and Pseudacrobeles unguicolis is also presented.
The marine nematodes usually comprise free-living species, although a few are parasitic. However, several cases of free-living nematodes found accidentally in the digestive tract of certain vertebrates, especially fishes, have sometimes been recorded and categorized as pseudoparasites. In the present work, two species of marine fishes, the rhomboid crappie, Diapterus rhombeus, and the silvered crappie, Eucinostomus argenteus (Perciformes: Gerreidae), from Angra dos Reis on the coast of Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) were examined. Seven species of free-living marine nematodes were found in the digestive tract of these fish. Several of these species remain unknown as free-living forms in Brazil. The combination of the fish feeding strategies and the poor preservation of the body of the nematode specimens found could indicate that these nematodes are pseudoparasites, appearing in the fishes' digestive tracts through accidental ingestion and thereafter surviving for brief periods of time. Descriptions, illustrations and tables of measurements are provided for all species. Six of these species (Croconema torquens, Dorylaimopsis pellucida, Oncholaimellus labiatus, Parodontophora breviamphida, Prooncholaimus ornatus, Trissonchulus latus) have been reported for the first time from the Brazilian coast.
Three known species, Aphelenchus avenae, Ditylenchus myceliophagus and Tylenchorhynchus aduncus (Rhabditida, Tylenchomorpha), are described from sand coastal dunes in Spain associated to the rhizosphere of xerophilic plants. A. avenae is characterized by having stylet with 16–22 µm long, pharyngeal dorsal gland overlapping the intestine, postvulval uterine sac about 2.5 times the body diameter, female tail short conoid with rounded tip bearing the phasmid and male bursa well developed. D. myceliophagus is characterized by having lateral field with four incisures, stylet 7–8 µm long, basal bulb irregularly pyriform, tail of both sexes similar with rounded tip and bursa of the male reaching about three-quarters of tail length. T. aduncus is characterized by its lateral field with six incisures, stylet 15–18 μm long, spicules with bifurcate tip and distal ventral crest, and gubernaculum with hook-like manubrium. New morphological, including SEM study, and morphometrical data are included for the three species. Also, phylogenetic analysis based on 18S and 28S rDNA is included for two of the species studied. Additionally, two species belonging to the superfamily Aphelenchoidea are transferred to other genera: Aphelenchus assamensis to the genus Aphelenchoides and Aphelenchoides dhanachandi to the genus Potensaphelenchus.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.