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1.
Parasite ; 14(4): 271-80, 2007 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18225415

ABSTRACT

A new species of heligmosomoid nematode belonging to the subfamily Nippostrongylinae Durette-Desset, 1970 is described: Heligmonina wakelini n. sp., a parasite from the small intestine of the commensal rodent Mastomys natalensis (Smith, 1834) from Swaziland. It differs from the most closely related species H. boomkeri Durette-Desset & Digiani, 2005 by the number of the cuticular ridges in the female synlophe (10 vs 12), the width of the left ala, larger than the body diameter in the male, and the inclination of the axis of orientation of the ridges in both sexes (53 degrees vs 70 degrees). New morphological data (head and synlophe) on Heligmonina chabaudi (Desset, 1964), also a parasite of Mastomys natalensis in the Republic of Congo, are provided in order to compare with the new species.


Subject(s)
Heligmosomatoidea/anatomy & histology , Heligmosomatoidea/classification , Phylogeny , Rodent Diseases/parasitology , Strongylida Infections/veterinary , Animals , Eswatini , Female , Male , Rodentia , Sex Characteristics , Species Specificity , Strongylida Infections/parasitology
2.
Parasite ; 12(4): 331-7, 2005 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16402565

ABSTRACT

In the small intestine of a single Arvicanthis ansorgei from Cameroon, two new species of Nippostrongylinae were found: Neoheligmonella zero n. sp. and Heligmonina comerounensis n. sp. N. zero belongs to the Neoheligmonella species in which the right dorsal ridge is poorly developed. Among these species, N. bainae (Durette-Desset, 1970), a parasite of Steatomys opinus from Burkina Fasso, is a closely related species. It is differentiated by the presence of vulvar alae, the ratio uterus length/body length and the separation of rays 2 and 3 at two thirds of their length. N. zero is also closely related to N. kenyae (Yeh, 1958) a parasite of Rattus rattus kijabius from Kenya by the pattern of the caudal bursa and the ratio spicules length/body length. The synlophe of N. kenyae was not described in detail but it is differentiated from N. zero by the position of the excretory pore, situated just posteriorly to the nerve ring and in the female by the ratio ovejector length/body length which is smaller. H. camerounensis n. sp. is characterised by the ratio dorsal ridges/ventral ridges which is 4/7. It is differentiated from the species of which the synlophe has not been described by the pattern of the caudal bursa (type 1-4 with tendancy 1-3-1). It is the first report of Nippostrongylinae species in Cameroon and the first record of a species of the genus Heligmonina in an Arvicanthis.


Subject(s)
Heligmosomatoidea/anatomy & histology , Heligmosomatoidea/classification , Murinae/parasitology , Rodent Diseases/parasitology , Strongylida Infections/veterinary , Animals , Cameroon , Female , Heligmosomatoidea/isolation & purification , Intestine, Small/parasitology , Male , Phylogeny , Species Specificity , Strongylida Infections/parasitology
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