2019
DOI: 10.1007/s00436-018-6182-2
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Developmental stages of Notocotylus magniovatus Yamaguti, 1934, Catatropis vietnamensis n. sp., Pseudocatatropis dvoryadkini n. sp., and phylogenetic relationships of Notocotylidae Lühe, 1909

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Cited by 16 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…For the monostome, this cercaria was molecularly classified into a clade of the family Notocotylidae with high posterior probability support for a close relationship with C. vietnamensis, which has been reported to infect the intestinal caeca of the Mallard (Anas platyrhyncha) under experimental conditions and to utilize the freshwater thiarid snail M. tuberculata as an intermediate host (Izrailskaia et al, 2019). Depending on posterior probability and genetic divergence, it is possible that the monostome cercaria (10.2MBR2) has an identical sequence and is conspecific with the C. vietnamensis.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For the monostome, this cercaria was molecularly classified into a clade of the family Notocotylidae with high posterior probability support for a close relationship with C. vietnamensis, which has been reported to infect the intestinal caeca of the Mallard (Anas platyrhyncha) under experimental conditions and to utilize the freshwater thiarid snail M. tuberculata as an intermediate host (Izrailskaia et al, 2019). Depending on posterior probability and genetic divergence, it is possible that the monostome cercaria (10.2MBR2) has an identical sequence and is conspecific with the C. vietnamensis.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…So, it is most obviously distinct from those species that use ‘pulmonate’ hosts (the Heterobranchia) as the first intermediate hosts. These species now get placed in the genus Pseudocatatropis by some researchers (Kanev et al ., 1994; Izrailskaia et al ., 2019). Others, however, do not dispute the diagnosis of the genus Catatropis and call the new species from the ‘pulmonate’ snails Chilina dombeiana (Bruguière, 1789) C. chilinae (Flores, Brugni, 2003).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In other Catatropis species where the first intermediate hosts are known, they belong to Caenogastropoda. Melanoides tuberculata (O. F. Müller, 1774) (Cerithioidea) hosts Catatropis vietnamensis Izrailskaia, Besprozvannykh, Tatonova et al ., 2019 (see Izrailskaia et al ., 2019). In other species, the first intermediate hosts belong to the order Littorinimorpha, the superfamily Truncatelloidea: Catatropis lagunae Bayssade-Dufour et al ., 1996 from Peringia ulvae (Pennant, 1777) (see Bayssade-Dufour et al ., 1996) and C. hatcheri from Heleobia (= Strobelitatea ) hatcheri (Pilsbry, 1911) (Flores and Brugni, 2006); and four species are from members of the family Bithyniidae: Catatropis indicus Srivastava, 1935 (Rohde and Onn, 1967; Koch, 2002), Catatropis morosovi Gubanov et al ., 1966 (Dvoryadkin, 1987), Catatropis hisikui Yamaguti, 1939 (Besprozvannykh, 2006) and C. verrucosa (Erkina, 1953; Kanev et al ., 1994).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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