Two new species of parasitic copepods of the genus Colobomatus Hesse, 1873 (Cyclopoida) are proposed based on specimens collected from the squirrelfishes (Holocentridae) off the coast of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Colobomatus luquei n. sp. from the interorbital canals of Holocentrus adscensionis (Osbeck) can be distinguished from its closest congeners by the following combination of characters in the adult female: first to fourth thoracic somites fused, two pairs of thoracic processes, fifth pedigerous somite without processes, and process in the third abdominal somite not transpassing the margins of the caudal rami; and in the adult male: antenna with two elements in the second endopodal segment, leg 1 with three spines and three setae in the second endopodal segment, and leg 2 with three spines and three setae in the second exopodal segment. Colobomatus freirei n. sp. from the interorbital canals of Holocentrus rufus (Walbaum) can be distinguished from its closest congeners through the possession of an anterior pair of thoracic processes four times longer than the posterior pair. The two new species described herein are the first representatives of the family Philichthyidae found to parasitize fish of the order Holocentriformes.
Two new species of copepods assigned to the genus
Acusicola
Cressey, 1970 (Cyclopoida: Ergasilidae) are proposed based on post-metamorphic adult females, parasitizing the gills of two actinopterygian fish off Brazil namely, the Tripletail
Lobotes surinamensis
(Bloch) (Lobotidae), collected in the coastal zone of the State of Pará, near Curuçá Municipallity, and the Swordspine snook
Centropomus ensiferus
Poey (Centropomidae) collected in Sepetiba Bay, State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Acusicola iamarinoi
n. sp.
parasite of
L. surinamensis
, differs from its closet congeners based on the first segment of the antennule armed with 10 setae, the presence of a maxillule armed with four elements and a pair of blunt processes dorsally on the fourth pedigerous somite.
Acusicola pasternakae
n. sp.
, collected from
C. ensiferus
, can be distinguished from its closest congeners based on the membranous sheath of the first endopodal segment of antenna with horizontal marks, the first segment of the antennule armed with 11 setae and a spine on the last exopodal segment of leg 2. This is the first report of representatives of
Acusicola
parasitizing fish of the families Lobotidae and Centropomidae as well as new geographical records of the genus in the coast of State of Pará and in Sepetiba Bay, Brazil.
Supplementary Information
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11230-022-10076-y.
(1) Background: Integrative taxonomy has been important in the comprehension of relationships among nematode parasites. Philometridae is a highly diverse family of these organisms, but poorly-known regarding genetic characterization and evolution. An integrative taxonomic analysis was performed to improve the knowledge of the evolutionary history of Philometridae. (2) Methods: Phylogenies were reconstructed based on genetic sequences alone and integrated with morphological/life history traits, which were phylogenetically mapped. The host–parasite cophylogeny was evaluated. (3) Results: Previously unpublished 28S rDNA sequences are given for some species. The phylogeny from this marker, although limited by data scarcity, showed similar patterns as that from 18S rDNA. Clades shared common features related to the structure of the esophagus and of the tail in males (especially the gubernaculum), site of infection, habitat, host taxa and geographic origin; most of these features were phylogenetically informative. The integrative phylogeny was better resolved. A cophylogenetic signal was present mainly in clades of freshwater species. (4) Conclusions: The speciation process in Philometridae is not unique or uniform; host capture, host–parasite co-evolution and allopatric (especially in freshwater) events may be occurring simultaneously in different lineages, places and times. Cases of plesiomorphy retention probably occur. Evolutionary convergence of poorly-informative characters is suggested, even though they are important for species diagnosis.
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