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1.
Commun Biol ; 7(1): 552, 2024 May 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38720028

ABSTRACT

Global biodiversity gradients are generally expected to reflect greater species replacement closer to the equator. However, empirical validation of global biodiversity gradients largely relies on vertebrates, plants, and other less diverse taxa. Here we assess the temporal and spatial dynamics of global arthropod biodiversity dynamics using a beta-diversity framework. Sampling includes 129 sampling sites whereby malaise traps are deployed to monitor temporal changes in arthropod communities. Overall, we encountered more than 150,000 unique barcode index numbers (BINs) (i.e. species proxies). We assess between site differences in community diversity using beta-diversity and the partitioned components of species replacement and richness difference. Global total beta-diversity (dissimilarity) increases with decreasing latitude, greater spatial distance and greater temporal distance. Species replacement and richness difference patterns vary across biogeographic regions. Our findings support long-standing, general expectations of global biodiversity patterns. However, we also show that the underlying processes driving patterns may be regionally linked.


Subject(s)
Arthropods , Biodiversity , Animals , Arthropods/classification , Arthropods/physiology , Geography , Spatio-Temporal Analysis
3.
Parasitol Res ; 122(1): 315-331, 2023 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36434318

ABSTRACT

Despite the wide distribution and health importance of anisakids of the genus Contracaecum, epidemiological data on their occurrence in definitive bird hosts are scarce, particularly from certain parts of the world that represent important wintering sites or migration stopovers for different bird species. In the present study, Contracaecum spp. infecting six great white pelicans (Pelecanus onocrotalus) in Israel were identified using light and scanning electron microscopy and phylogenetic analyses of nuclear internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase II (cox2). A PCR-RFLP method was also developed and applied to screen large numbers of Contracaecum parasites. Most (415/455) worms recovered were C. micropapillatum, followed by C. gibsoni (31/455), C. quadripapillatum (8/455), and C. multipapillatum E (1/455). Contracaecum micropapillatum from Israel and C. bancrofti from Australia are distinguishable by cox2 but less well resolved with ITS sequences, and could not be distinguished morphologically. Worms with cox2 matching C. gibsoni had ITS matching specimens identified as C. multipapillatum A. To the authors' knowledge, this represents the first of such studies in Israel and provides useful data on the ecology and distribution of different Contracaecum species of health and economic interest.


Subject(s)
Ascaridoidea , Bird Diseases , Animals , Phylogeny , Cyclooxygenase 2 , Birds/parasitology , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Bird Diseases/epidemiology , Bird Diseases/parasitology
4.
Exp Parasitol ; 242: 108368, 2022 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36044962

ABSTRACT

The Asian freshwater snail Melanoides tuberculata has been established since the 1960s in the Americas, where it transmits cercariae of a small number of digenetic trematode species from its native range. In 2021-2022, 24 M. tuberculata were discovered shedding transversotrematid cercariae in Puerto Rico, where parasites of this snail have not been previously studied. Adult transversotrematids (in some cases, gravid) were found on field-caught fish and on fish exposed to shedding snails, including on fish species native to Puerto Rico. Adults and cercariae were identified as Transversotrema patialense (Soparkar, 1924), a species native to the Indomalayan region. Morphological identification was supported with 28S rDNA sequences closely matching that from unidentified transversotrematid cercariae in Thailand. The absence of T. patialense in snails collected prior to 2021, increasing prevalence of infection in snails collected thereafter, and lack of variation in parasite DNA sequences (28S, internal transcribed spacer 2, cytochrome c oxidase I) from three isolates are consistent with a recently introduced and possibly expanding parasite population. Transversotrema patialense has been recorded outside its native range before, but most studies (including a prior record in the Americas) reported the parasite from captive hosts from commercial sources such as pet shops. The present results thus provide the first demonstration of natural transmission of T. patialense in the Americas. Phylogenetic analysis of 28S but not of ITS2 show the transversotrematid genus Transversotrema Witenberg, 1944 is paraphyletic, with Crusziella Cribb, Bray and Barker 1992 nested within it.


Subject(s)
Parasites , Trematoda , Trematode Infections , Animals , Phylogeny , Electron Transport Complex IV/genetics , Trematoda/genetics , Snails/parasitology , Cercaria , DNA, Ribosomal , Trematode Infections/epidemiology , Trematode Infections/veterinary , Trematode Infections/parasitology
5.
Parasitology ; 149(14): 1894-1909, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36000173

ABSTRACT

Metacercariae of the genus Posthodiplostomum are often recorded in freshwater fish hosts. While the diversity and taxonomy of this genus are receiving increasing attention in molecular phylogenetic studies, available data remain geographically biased. Most molecular studies of Posthodiplostomum and morphologically similar (neascus) worms originate in North America and Europe and Asia (more than 60% of DNA sequences are from USA and Canada), with few data currently available from the Neotropics, where high host diversity suggests high and under-sampled parasite diversity. In this study, we report molecular and morphological data from metacercariae of Posthodiplostomum in fish in Puerto Rico, where only a single species has been previously reported. Partial sequences of cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 from metacercariae from Dajaus monticola (native to Puerto Rico) and the introduced fishes Poecilia reticulata, Parachromis managuensis, Lepomis macrochirus and Micropterus salmoides revealed 7 genetically distinct species-level lineages, of which 4 were novel. We report novel molecular life-cycle linkages in Posthodiplostomum macrocotyle (metacercariae in muscle of the cichlid Pa. managuensis), a species previously known only from adults in birds from South America; and in Posthodiplostomum sp. 23 (metacercariae in poeciliids), which has recently been found in Ardea herodias in Georgia, USA. We also report the first molecular data from Posthodiplostomum sp. 8 in M. salmoides in the Caribbean. Metacercariae of most species were morphologically distinguished and all displayed narrow specificity for fish hosts, with no indication of parasite sharing among introduced and native fishes.


Subject(s)
Fish Diseases , Poecilia , Trematoda , Trematode Infections , Animals , Humans , Metacercariae/anatomy & histology , Phylogeny , Caribbean People , Fish Diseases/epidemiology , Fish Diseases/parasitology , Fishes/parasitology , Birds/parasitology , Trematode Infections/epidemiology , Trematode Infections/veterinary , Trematode Infections/parasitology
6.
Pathogens ; 11(7)2022 Jul 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35890014

ABSTRACT

Schistosomatidae Stiles and Hassall 1898 is a medically significant family of digenetic trematodes (Trematoda: Digenea), members of which infect mammals or birds as definitive hosts and aquatic or amphibious gastropods as intermediate hosts. Currently, there are 17 named genera, for many of which evolutionary interrelationships remain unresolved. The lack of a resolved phylogeny has encumbered our understanding of schistosomatid evolution, specifically patterns of host-use and the role of host-switching in diversification. Here, we used targeted sequence capture of ultra-conserved elements (UCEs) from representatives of 13 of the 17 named genera and 11 undescribed lineages that are presumed to represent either novel genera or species to generate a phylogenomic dataset for the estimation of schistosomatid interrelationships. This study represents the largest phylogenetic effort within the Schistosomatidae in both the number of loci and breadth of taxon sampling. We present a near-comprehensive family-level phylogeny providing resolution to several clades of long-standing uncertainty within Schistosomatidae, including resolution for the placement of the North American mammalian schistosomes, implying a second separate capture of mammalian hosts. Additionally, we present evidence for the placement of Macrobilharzia at the base of the Schistosoma + Bivitellobilharzia radiation. Patterns of definitive and intermediate host use and a strong role for intermediate host-switching are discussed relative to schistosomatid diversification.

7.
Int J Parasitol Parasites Wildl ; 16: 126-137, 2021 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34552844

ABSTRACT

Wild canids are hosts to a wide range of parasites and can play a role in transmission of zoonoses. As many parasites are transmitted through food webs, and wild canids are at high trophic levels, parasite prevalence and diversity in wild canids can serve as excellent indicators of ecosystem health. Our main objectives were to update knowledge on the composition of gastrointestinal helminths in wild canids from Québec, Canada, and to describe differences in parasite prevalence and diversity among canid species and regions. Hunters and trappers provided whole carcasses of red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) (N = 176), and intestinal tracts of coyotes (Canis latrans) (N = 77) and gray wolves (Canis lupus) (N = 23) harvested for non-research purposes over the winter of 2016-2017. A modified Stoll's centrifugation sucrose flotation on feces of 250 wild canids was used, and eggs of one family and eight genera of parasitic helminths were recovered: diphyllobothriids, Taenia/Echinococcus spp., Capillaria spp., Toxascaris sp., Toxocara sp., Trichuris sp., Uncinaria sp., and Metorchis sp. Adult Taenia spp. cestodes were recovered from 61 of 276 (22%) canids. Six different species (T. hydatigena, T. twitchelli, T. crassiceps, T. polyacantha, T. krabbei, and T. pisiformis-"like") were differentiated based on DNA sequenced from 65 individual adult cestodes using primers for the nicotinamide adenosine dinucleotide dehydrogenase subunit 1 (ND1) and cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (CO1) mitochondrial DNA loci. Alaria sp. trematodes infected 89 of 276 canids (32%). A subset were identified as A. americana at the CO1 locus. The marine trematode Cryptocotyle lingua was reported for the first time in foxes in the province of Québec. These results help us understand more fully the predator-prey relationships within this group of canids. This baseline data in regional parasite prevalence and intensity is critical in order to detect future changes following ecological disturbances due to climate and landscape alterations.

8.
Int J Parasitol ; 51(8): 667-683, 2021 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33716019

ABSTRACT

When subjected to molecular study, species of digeneans believed to be cosmopolitan are usually found to consist of complexes of species with narrower distributions. We present molecular and morphological evidence of transcontinental distributions in two species of Apharyngostrigea Ciurea, 1924, based on samples from Africa and the Americas. Sequences of cytochrome c oxidase I and, in some samples, internal transcribed spacer, revealed Apharyngostrigea pipientis (Faust, 1918) in Tanzania (first known African record), Argentina, Brazil, USA and Canada. Sequences from A. pipientis also match previously published sequences identified as Apharyngostrigea cornu (Zeder, 1800) originating in Mexico. Hosts of A. pipientis surveyed include definitive hosts from the Afrotropic, Neotropic and Nearctic, as well as first and second intermediate hosts from the Americas, including the type host and type region. In addition, metacercariae of A. pipientis were obtained from experimentally infected Poecilia reticulata, the first known record of this parasite in a non-amphibian second intermediate host. Variation in cytochrome c oxidase I haplotypes in A. pipientis is consistent with a long established, wide-ranging species with moderate genetic structure among Nearctic, Neotropic and Afrotropic regions. We attribute this to natural dispersal by birds and find no evidence of anthropogenic introductions of exotic host species. Sequences of CO1 and ITS from adult Apharyngostrigea simplex (Johnston, 1904) from Egretta thula in Argentina matched published data from cercariae from Biomphalaria straminea from Brazil and metacercariae from Cnesterodon decemmaculatus in Argentina, consistent with previous morphological and life-cycle studies reporting this parasite-originally described in Australia-in South America. Analyses of the mitochondrial genome and rDNA operon from A. pipientis support prior phylogenies based on shorter markers showing the Strigeidae Railliet, 1919 to be polyphyletic.


Subject(s)
Trematoda , Trematode Infections , Animals , Brazil , Genomics , Life Cycle Stages , Phylogeny , Trematoda/genetics , Trematode Infections/veterinary
9.
Exp Parasitol ; 219: 108002, 2020 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32976822

ABSTRACT

Australapatemon spp. are cosmopolitan trematodes that infect freshwater snails, aquatic leeches, and birds. Despite their broad geographic distribution, relatively little is known about interactions between Australapatemon spp. and their leech hosts, particularly under experimental conditions and in natural settings. We used experimental exposures to determine how Australapatemon burti cercariae dosage (number administered to leech hosts, Erpobdella microstoma) affected infection success (fraction to encyst as metacercariae), infection abundance, host survival, and host size over the 100 days following exposure. Interestingly, infection success was strongly density-dependent, such that there were no differences in metacercariae load even among hosts exposed to a 30-fold difference in cercariae. This relationship suggests that local processes (e.g., resource availability, interference competition, or host defenses) may play a strong role in parasite transmission. Our results also indicated that metacercariae did not become evident until ~4 weeks post exposure, with average load climbing until approximately 13 weeks. There was no evidence of metacercariae death or clearance over the census period. Parasite exposure had no detectable effects on leech size or survival, even with nearly 1,000 cercariae. Complementary surveys of leeches in California revealed that 11 of 14 ponds supported infection by A. burti (based on morphology and molecular sequencing), with an average prevalence of 32% and similar metacercariae intensity as in our experimental exposures. The extended development time and extreme density dependence of A. burti has implications for studying naturally occurring host populations, for which detected infections may represent only a fraction of cercariae to which animals have been exposed. Future investigation of these underlying mechanisms would be benefical in understanding host-parasite relationships.


Subject(s)
Leeches/parasitology , Trematoda/physiology , Animals , Bayes Theorem , Binomial Distribution , California , Cercaria/physiology , Electron Transport Complex IV/chemistry , Electron Transport Complex IV/genetics , Leeches/growth & development , Leeches/physiology , Likelihood Functions , Linear Models , Poisson Distribution , Ponds , Trematoda/genetics
10.
Parasitol Res ; 119(8): 2511-2520, 2020 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32562066

ABSTRACT

Zygocotyle lunata inhabits the caecum of birds and mammals from the American continent. This amphistome parasite is easily maintained in the laboratory and serves as a model organism in life-cycle studies, but it has seldom been studied using molecular data. Neither the position of Z. lunata in the superfamily Paramphistomoidea nor the monophyly of the Zygocotylidae has been evaluated with molecular phylogenetic methods. In the present study, adult specimens of Z. lunata obtained experimentally in mice from Brazil were submitted to molecular studies. Partial sequences of nuclear (1261 bp of 28S and 418 bp of 5.8S-ITS-2) and mitochondrial (1410 bp of cytochrome c oxidase 1, cox1) markers were compared with published data. In the most well-resolved phylogeny, based on 28S sequences, Z. lunata clustered in a well-supported clade with Wardius zibethicus, the only other species currently included in the Zygocotylidae, thus confirming the validity of this family. Divergence of 28S sequences between these species was 2.2%, which falls in the range of intergeneric variation (0.9-5.6%) observed in the other two monophyletic groups in the 28S tree, i.e., representatives of Gastrodicidae and Neotropical cladorchiids (Cladorchiidae). Analysis of ITS-2 and two parts of the cox1 gene placed Z. lunata within poorly resolved clades or large polytomies composed of several paramphistomoid families, without clarifying higher-level phylogenetic relationships. The cox1 of a Brazilian isolate of Z. lunata is 99.6% similar to a Canadian isolate, confirming the pan-American distribution of the species. Finally, our phylogenetic reconstructions of Paramphistomoidea revealed a complex scenario in the taxonomic composition of some amphistome families, which highlights a need for further integrative studies that will likely result in rearrangements of traditional morphology-based classifications.


Subject(s)
Bird Diseases/parasitology , Cecum/parasitology , Paramphistomatidae/genetics , Paramphistomatidae/isolation & purification , Phylogeny , Trematode Infections/veterinary , Animals , Birds/parasitology , Brazil , Canada , Female , Life Cycle Stages , Male , Mice , Paramphistomatidae/classification , Paramphistomatidae/growth & development , Trematode Infections/parasitology
11.
Parasitol Res ; 119(7): 2129-2137, 2020 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32472382

ABSTRACT

Diplostomum ardeae Dubois, 1969 has seldom been reported since its description from the great blue heron (Ardea herodias L., 1758) in the USA. Sequences obtained in this study from the barcode region of cytochrome c oxidase 1 (CO1) in diplostomids from black-crowned night heron (Nycticorax nycticorax (L., 1758)) in Puerto Rico matched data from D. ardeae from A. herodias in the type region. We also obtained DNA barcodes from morphologically similar diplostomids from a rufescent tiger heron (Tigrisoma lineatum (Boddaert, 1783)) and from metacercariae from eye lenses of Trachelyopterus galeatus (Linnaeus, 1766) from the Paraná River basin in Argentina and Brazil, respectively. Barcodes matched (97-100% identity) in these South American adult and larval specimens as well as in recently published sequences from metacercariae from 11 other siluriform fishes from the same region. Barcodes from the South American species, which we describe as Diplostomum lunaschiae n. sp., differed from those of D. ardeae by 7.2-9.8%, and the new species differs from D. ardeae in its size, pharynx:oral sucker length ratio, egg:body length ratio, and distribution of vitellaria. As in prior phylogenetic analysis of CO1 sequences, both D. ardeae and D. lunaschiae n. sp. were not associated with Diplostomum. In more character-rich analyses of nuclear rDNA and of mitochondrial genomes, D. ardeae was an early divergent member of clades of species of Diplostomum. Consequently, we continue to consider D. ardeae and D. lunaschiae n. sp. members of Diplostomum, in contrast to recent suggestions that these species may belong to a different genus.


Subject(s)
Birds/parasitology , Life Cycle Stages , Phylogeny , Trematoda/classification , Trematoda/growth & development , Animals , Catfishes/parasitology , DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic , DNA, Ribosomal/genetics , Genome, Mitochondrial/genetics , Metacercariae/classification , Metacercariae/genetics , Puerto Rico , Trematoda/anatomy & histology , Trematoda/genetics
12.
Parasitol Res ; 119(3): 885-892, 2020 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31901994

ABSTRACT

In the Afrotropic region, the genus Clinostomum is represented by four accepted and four unnamed species distinguished using molecular data. Here, we describe one of the four unnamed species as Clinostomum ukolii n. sp. based on metacercariae from siluriform fishes (Synodontis batensoda, Schilbe intermedius) collected in Nigeria and South Africa. The new species is distinguished by molecular data (39 new sequences of partial cytochrome c oxidase I ≥ 6.7% divergent from those of other species) and morphological differences from named and unnamed species in the same region. Metacercariae of C. ukolii n. sp. can be distinguished based on size, tegumental spines, and various aspects of the genital complex, including its position, lobation of the anterior testis, and the disposition and shape of the cirrus pouch. Although descriptions of new species of digeneans are typically based on the morphology of adults, we argue that in cases where data are available from metacercariae from regionally known species, new species can be described based on metacercariae, particularly when supported by molecular data, as here. Moreover, sub-adult reproductive structures can be clearly visualized in metacercaria of Clinostomum. Considering metacercariae as potential types for new species could advance clinostome systematics more rapidly, because metacercariae are encountered much more often than adults in avian definitive hosts.


Subject(s)
Catfishes/parasitology , Fish Diseases/parasitology , Metacercariae/genetics , Trematoda/classification , Trematode Infections/veterinary , Animals , Electron Transport Complex IV/genetics , Fishes , Metacercariae/anatomy & histology , Metacercariae/classification , Nigeria , Phylogeny , South Africa , Trematoda/anatomy & histology , Trematoda/genetics
13.
Parasitol Res ; 118(12): 3253-3265, 2019 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31729573

ABSTRACT

Metacercariae of Clinostomum Leidy, 1856 are frequently encountered in freshwater fish. In 2015, a provisional species of Clinostomum in People's Republic of China (PRC) was distinguished from C. complanatum (Rudolphi, 1819) in Europe based on divergent cytochrome c oxidase I (CO1). However, in subsequent studies in East Asia, the same divergent CO1 genotype was identified as C. complanatum. These matching sequences suggest that either the provisional East Asian species was incorrectly distinguished from C. complanatum in 2015 or that C. complanatum in East Asia was misidentified in later studies. We tested these alternatives by sequencing the mitochondrial genome of C. complanatum in Italy, which was 5.7% divergent from a previously published sequence from Clinostomum in PRC, including differences in 80 of 3390 (2.4%) translated amino acids. Partial CO1 sequences of specimens from PRC and those from Italy, Romania, and Turkey also each formed reciprocally monophyletic clades. Partial CO1 from the East Asian clade varied by mean 3.6% (range 2.4-4.8%) from C. complanatum from Italy, Romania, and Turkey; mean intra-clade CO1 variation was 0.3% (range 0-1.9%). Metacercariae from Europe and East Asia display significant morphometric variation, and data from the literature suggest morphological differences in the genital complex of adults. Although sequences of nuclear rDNA did not differ between isolates from the west and East Asia, taken together, these results lead us to describe a new species of Clinostomum.


Subject(s)
Phylogeny , Trematoda/classification , Animals , Asia , DNA, Ribosomal/genetics , Fishes/parasitology , Fresh Water/parasitology , Genome, Mitochondrial/genetics , Metacercariae/anatomy & histology , Metacercariae/classification , Metacercariae/genetics , Species Specificity , Trematoda/anatomy & histology , Trematoda/genetics
14.
Acta Trop ; 199: 105082, 2019 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31351070

ABSTRACT

Trematodes belonging to the superfamily Diplostomoidea have complex life cycles involving birds, mammals and reptiles as definitive hosts, and gastropods and different groups of invertebrates and vertebrates as intermediate hosts. Molecular studies of these parasites are numerous, but data from larval stages in molluscs remain scarce, particularly in South America. The present study focused mainly on five morphotypes of longifurcate cercariae found in Biomphalaria straminea (Dunker, 1848) from Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil, collected between 2009 and 2017. In each morphotype, nuclear internal transcribed spacer (ITS1-5.8S ITS-2) rDNA and mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase 1 (COI) genes were sequenced. Laboratory-reared fish, Poecilia reticulata Peters, 1859 or snails, Biomphalaria glabrata (Say, 1818) were exposed to cercariae to obtain metacercariae. The morphology of cercariae, experimentally obtained metacercariae, and phylogenetic analyses led to the identification of three species of Diplostomidae [Austrodiplostomum compactum (Lutz, 1928), Crassiphialinae gen. sp. and Hysteromorpha sp.] and two species of Strigeidae (Cotylurus sp., Apharyngostrigea sp.). Previously published sequences allowed species-level identification for only A. compactum, although provisional identifications were possible in two cases. First, the COI from cercariae of Apharyngostrigea sp. in Brazil matched those of metacercariae from naturally infected Cnesterodon decemmaculatus (Jenyns, 1842) in Argentina; although a positive identification is not possible, the material presents morphological similarities with larval stages previously described for A. simplex. Secondly, Cotylurus sp. resembles C. lutzi. Our analysis of previously published COI sequences suggests that Cotylurus cornutus (Rudolphi, 1808) has a Holarctic distribution. Both the morphology of experimentally obtained metacercariae and COI sequences indicate that Hysteromorpha sp. in Brazil is distinct from congeners in North America [Hysteromorpha corti (Hughes, 1929)] and Europe [Hysteromorpha triloba (Rudolphi, 1819)].


Subject(s)
Biomphalaria/parasitology , Cercaria/anatomy & histology , Trematoda/anatomy & histology , Trematode Infections/parasitology , Animals , Brazil , Female , Male , Trematoda/classification , Trematoda/genetics
15.
Parasitology ; 146(6): 805-813, 2019 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30638172

ABSTRACT

The genus Clinostomoides Dollfus, 1950 was erected to accommodate a single worm from Ardea goliath sampled in the Belgian Congo. The specimen was distinguished from other clinostomids by its large size and posterior genitalia. In the following years, metacercariae of Clinostomoides brieni, have been described in Clarias spp. in southern and western Africa. A few authors have referred to Clinostomum brieni, but all such usages appear to be lapsus calami, and the validity of Clinostomoides remains widely accepted. In this study our aim was: position C. brieni among the growing clinostomids molecular database, and redescribe the species with emphasis on characters that have emerged as important in recent work. We sequenced two nuclear (partial 18S and ITS) and one mitochondrial marker (partial cytochrome c oxidase I) and studied morphology in metacercariae from hosts and localities likely to harbour the type species (Clarias spp., Democratic Republic of the Congo, South Africa). Phylogenetic analysis shows C. brieni belongs within Clinostomum Leidy, 1856. We therefore transfer C. brieni to Clinostomum, amend the diagnosis for the genus Clinostomum and provide a critical analysis of other species in Clinostomoides, all of which we consider species inquirendae, as they rest on comparisons of different developmental stages.


Subject(s)
Metacercariae/classification , Metacercariae/genetics , Phylogeny , Trematoda/classification , Trematoda/genetics , Animals , Catfishes/parasitology , Cluster Analysis , DNA, Helminth/chemistry , DNA, Helminth/genetics , DNA, Ribosomal/chemistry , DNA, Ribosomal/genetics , DNA, Ribosomal Spacer/chemistry , DNA, Ribosomal Spacer/genetics , Democratic Republic of the Congo , Electron Transport Complex IV/genetics , Fish Diseases/parasitology , Metacercariae/isolation & purification , RNA, Ribosomal, 18S/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA , South Africa , Trematoda/isolation & purification , Trematode Infections/parasitology , Trematode Infections/veterinary
16.
Parasitol Res ; 117(12): 3927-3934, 2018 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30353231

ABSTRACT

Postharmostomum commutatum (Dietz, 1858), a parasite of the caeca of poultry, has been reported from many different parts of the world. Despite its importance, there are no molecular sequences available and its phylogenetic position is unknown in relation to other members of Brachylaimoidea, a group in which taxonomic confusion reigns. Here, morphological and molecular techniques were used to study digeneans from the caeca of free-range chickens found naturally infected in the municipality of Viçosa, state of Minas Gerais, Brazil, between August 2017 and May 2018. The specimens were identified as P. commutatum, with Postharmostomum gallinum Witenberg, 1923 herein considered a junior synonym. Sequences obtained for the 28S, ITS2, and cox-1 genes were compared with sequences available from other species of Brachylaimoidea. Phylogenetic analysis of the three markers indicates P. commutatum formed an isolated lineage from other brachylaimoids, supporting the distinct status of the genus. The topology of phylogenetic trees obtained suggests that the morphology-based classification of families of Brachylaimoidea is artificial and new rearrangements of some genera or creation of new families may be necessary. The sequences newly obtained here will be useful for testing the cosmopolitan distribution of P. commutatum.


Subject(s)
Cecum/parasitology , Chickens/parasitology , Trematoda/classification , Trematoda/genetics , Animals , Brazil , Cyclooxygenase 1/genetics , DNA, Helminth/genetics , DNA, Intergenic/genetics , Phylogeny , Poultry/parasitology , RNA, Ribosomal, 28S/genetics
17.
Int J Parasitol ; 48(13): 1043-1059, 2018 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30347194

ABSTRACT

Higher systematics within the Digenea, Carus 1863 have been relatively stable since a phylogenetic analysis of partial nuclear ribosomal markers (rDNA) led to the erection of the Diplostomida Olson, Cribb, Tkach, Bray, and Littlewood, 2003. However, recent mitochondrial (mt) genome phylogenies suggest this order might be paraphyletic. These analyses show members of two diplostomidan superfamilies are more closely related to the Plagiorchiida La Rue, 1957 than to other members of the Diplostomida. A recent phylogeny based on partial cytochrome c oxidase I also indicates one of the groups implicated, the Diplostomoidea Poirier, 1886, is non-monophyletic. To determine if these results were robust to additional taxon sampling, we analyzed mt genomes from seven diplostomoids in three families. To choose between phylogenetic alternatives based on mt genomes and the prior rDNA-based topology, we analyzed hundreds of ultra-conserved genomic elements assembled from shotgun sequencing. The Diplostomida was paraphyletic in the mt genome phylogeny but supported in the ultra-conserved genomic element phylogeny. We speculate this mitonuclear discordance is related to ancient, rapid radiation in the Digenea. Both ultra-conserved genomic elements and mt genomes support the monophyly of the Diplostomoidea and show congruent relationships within it. The Cyathocotylidae Mühling, 1898 are early diverging descendants of a paraphyletic clade of Diplostomidae Poirier, 1886, in which are nested members of the Strigeidae Railliet, 1919; the results support prior suggestions that the Crassiphialinae Sudarikov, 1960 will rise to the family level. Morphological traits of diplostomoid metacercariae appear to be more useful for differentiating clades than those of adults. We describe a new species of Cotylurus Szidat, 1928, resurrect a species of Hysteromorpha Lutz, 1931, and find support for a species of Alaria Schrank, 1788 of contested validity. Complete rDNA operons from seven diplostomoid species are provided as a resource for future studies.


Subject(s)
Phylogeny , Trematoda/classification , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Base Sequence , Conserved Sequence , Cyclooxygenase 1/genetics , DNA, Helminth/chemistry , DNA, Helminth/genetics , DNA, Ribosomal/genetics , Genome, Mitochondrial/genetics , Likelihood Functions , Operon , Reproducibility of Results , Trematoda/anatomy & histology , Trematoda/genetics
18.
Infect Genet Evol ; 63: 95-103, 2018 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29778767

ABSTRACT

Species of the genus Posthodiplostomum are intestinal parasites of piscivorous birds with worldwide distribution. Recent molecular surveys have focused on developmental stages from vertebrate hosts, with few sequences from larvae found in molluscs. Moreover, most published molecular data are from collections in North America, Europe and Asia, and there are no data for South American species. In the present study, cercariae found in the freshwater limpet Gundlachia ticaga from Brazil were used for morphological, experimental and molecular studies. The longifurcate cercariae, Neascus-type metacercariae obtained in experimentally infected guppies (Poecilia reticulata), and an adult parasite recovered from a mouse were morphologically identified as Posthodiplostomum nanum. Sequences of DNA from internal transcribed spacer (ITS) rDNA and cytochrome c oxidase 1 (cox1) from the cercariae and metacercariae were compared with published data, yielding no matches (ITS divergence ≥ 5.5%, cox1 ≥ 13.9%). Phylogenetic analyses of the ITS sequences suggest paraphyly within the genus Posthodiplostomum, or misidentifications of parasites in molecular studies. For example, ITS sequences of Mesoophorodiplostomum pricei and Posthodiplostomum centrarchi or the unnamed species Posthodiplostomum sp. 8 diverge by only 1.1-1.2% and 0.6%, respectively, and all three species fall within a well-supported clade, suggesting that these isolates are congeneric. The phylogenetic tree obtained for cox1 sequences, although not well resolved, reveals that the type species of the genus, Posthodiplostomum cuticola, does not group with any species previously identified as Posthodiplostomum. Overall, the analyses of molecular data here obtained for P. nanum compared with sequences of related species suggest that a review of this group is necessary. Such studies may result in a split of the genus Posthodiplostomum and the transference of some species currently assigned in this genus to other already described genera.


Subject(s)
Trematoda/genetics , Trematoda/physiology , Animals , Brazil , Fish Diseases/parasitology , Immunocompromised Host , Life Cycle Stages , Mice , Phylogeny , Poecilia/parasitology , Trematoda/anatomy & histology , Trematode Infections/parasitology , Trematode Infections/veterinary
19.
J Parasitol ; 104(4): 353-358, 2018 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29648929

ABSTRACT

Species composition and diversity of dactylogyrids were compared on gills of wild and cultured goldfish (silver crucian carp) Carassius auratus from 3 naturally populated lakes and 3 stocked aquaculture ponds in the Hubei province of China to examine the differences in the gill parasite community between these natural and farmed waters. Of the 7 Dactylogyrus spp. detected, all were found in lakes and 5 in ponds, with Dactylogyrus inexpectatus and Dactylogyrus anchoratus being absent from ponds. No significant correlation was found between the species richness and habitat area or host size, nor was there a significant difference in mean species richness between lakes (0.41-0.65) and ponds (0.30-0.76). Brillouin's diversity in lakes (0.049-0.067) was higher than that in ponds (0.024-0.046), but not significantly so. Although the diversity of parasite communities was higher in wild goldfish, higher mean abundance of some Dactylogyrus spp. was found in cultured goldfish. Based on Bray-Curtis similarity, it was difficult to differentiate parasite communities in lakes from those in ponds at the infracommunity level, whereas the 3 lakes and Guanqiao pond differed markedly from the remaining 2 ponds at the component community level. Although infracommunities differed among waterbodies, no effects of fish length or waterbody type were found on infracommunity or component community structure. Together, these results suggest that abundance and species richness of Dactylogyrus spp. on goldfish in lakes and farm ponds are influenced by habitat-specific environmental factors.


Subject(s)
Fish Diseases/parasitology , Goldfish/parasitology , Platyhelminths/classification , Trematode Infections/veterinary , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Animals, Wild , China/epidemiology , Fish Diseases/epidemiology , Fish Diseases/immunology , Fisheries , Gills/parasitology , Goldfish/immunology , Lakes , Platyhelminths/growth & development , Ponds , Population Density , Prevalence , Trematode Infections/epidemiology , Trematode Infections/immunology , Trematode Infections/parasitology
20.
Adv Parasitol ; 98: 167-225, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28942769

ABSTRACT

Members of the Diplostomoidea mature in amniotes and employ vertebrates, annelids and molluscs as second intermediate hosts. Diplostomoid life cycles generally follow a three-host pattern typical of digeneans, but novelties have arisen in some species, including obligate four-host life cycles, vertical transmission, and intracellular parasitism. In this review, we summarize the basic biology of diplostomoids with reference to molecular studies, and present challenges, gaps and areas where molecular data could address long-standing questions. Our analysis of published studies revealed that most molecular surveys find more diplostomoid species than expected, but this tendency is influenced by how much effort goes into examining specimens morphologically and the number of sequenced worms. To date, molecular work has concentrated disproportionately on intraspecific or species-level diversity of larval stages in the Diplostomidae in temperate northern regions. Although the higher taxonomy of the superfamily is recognized to be in need of revision, little molecular work has been conducted at this level. Our phylogenetic analysis indicates several families and subfamilies require reconsideration, and that larval morphotypes are more reflective of evolutionary relationships than definitive hosts. The host associations of adult diplostomoids result from host-switching processes, whereas molecular surveys indicate that larval diplostomoid metacercariae have narrow ranges of second intermediate hosts, consistent with coevolution. Molecular data are often used to link diplostomoid developmental stages, and we provide data from adult Neodiplostomum and Mesoophorodiplostomum that correct earlier misidentifications of their larval stages and propose alternatives to collecting definitive hosts.


Subject(s)
Life Cycle Stages , Phylogeny , Trematoda/classification , Trematoda/genetics , Animals , Host-Parasite Interactions , Life Cycle Stages/genetics , Life Cycle Stages/physiology , Metacercariae
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