Cargando…

A new microbothriid monogenean Dermopristis pterophilus n. sp. from the skin of the Critically Endangered green sawfish Pristis zijsron Bleeker, 1851 (Batoidea: Pristidae) in Western Australia

A new microbothriid monogenean Dermopristis pterophilus n. sp. is described from the skin of the Critically Endangered green sawfish Pristis zijsron Bleeker, 1851 in the Ashburton River delta, northern Western Australia. Analyses of the 28S ribosomal DNA marker and the molecular barcoding markers Hi...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ingelbrecht, Jack, Morgan, David L., Lear, Karissa O., Fazeldean, Travis, Lymbery, Alan J., Norman, Bradley M., Martin, Storm B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8814595/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35141133
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijppaw.2022.01.006
_version_ 1784645099008819200
author Ingelbrecht, Jack
Morgan, David L.
Lear, Karissa O.
Fazeldean, Travis
Lymbery, Alan J.
Norman, Bradley M.
Martin, Storm B.
author_facet Ingelbrecht, Jack
Morgan, David L.
Lear, Karissa O.
Fazeldean, Travis
Lymbery, Alan J.
Norman, Bradley M.
Martin, Storm B.
author_sort Ingelbrecht, Jack
collection PubMed
description A new microbothriid monogenean Dermopristis pterophilus n. sp. is described from the skin of the Critically Endangered green sawfish Pristis zijsron Bleeker, 1851 in the Ashburton River delta, northern Western Australia. Analyses of the 28S ribosomal DNA marker and the molecular barcoding markers Histone 3 and Elongation Factor 1 α confirmed position among the Microbothriidae, with close affinity to the only other sequenced representative of Dermopristis Kearn, Whittington and Evans-Groing, 2010. The new species is morphologically consistent with the concept of Dermopristis; it has two testes, lacks a male copulatory organ and has a simple haptor. It is smaller than its two congeners D. paradoxus Kearn, Whittington and Evans-Gowing, 2010 and D. cairae Whittington and Kearn, 2011 and is most similar to the former, distinguished only in that it lacks the strong, transverse, parallel ridges on the ventral body surface that characterise that species. It is more easily distinguished from D. cairae, differing in body shape, possession of a seminal receptacle, and relative position and size of the haptor. It may further differ from both species by fine details of the gut diverticula, although these details are difficult to ascertain. Spermatophores were observed in the new species, similar to those previously reported for D. cairae. The new species exhibits site attachment preference: infections were greatest on and immediately adjacent to the host pelvic fins (including male reproductive organs, i.e. claspers), moderate in proximity to the dorsal and pectoral fins, few on the caudal fin and peduncle, and infrequently, isolated worms occurred elsewhere on the dorsal and ventral surfaces of the body. There was no incidence of infection on the head (including rostrum). We presume D. pterophilus is restricted to P. zijsron and thus likely faces the same threat of extinction.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8814595
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-88145952022-02-08 A new microbothriid monogenean Dermopristis pterophilus n. sp. from the skin of the Critically Endangered green sawfish Pristis zijsron Bleeker, 1851 (Batoidea: Pristidae) in Western Australia Ingelbrecht, Jack Morgan, David L. Lear, Karissa O. Fazeldean, Travis Lymbery, Alan J. Norman, Bradley M. Martin, Storm B. Int J Parasitol Parasites Wildl Article A new microbothriid monogenean Dermopristis pterophilus n. sp. is described from the skin of the Critically Endangered green sawfish Pristis zijsron Bleeker, 1851 in the Ashburton River delta, northern Western Australia. Analyses of the 28S ribosomal DNA marker and the molecular barcoding markers Histone 3 and Elongation Factor 1 α confirmed position among the Microbothriidae, with close affinity to the only other sequenced representative of Dermopristis Kearn, Whittington and Evans-Groing, 2010. The new species is morphologically consistent with the concept of Dermopristis; it has two testes, lacks a male copulatory organ and has a simple haptor. It is smaller than its two congeners D. paradoxus Kearn, Whittington and Evans-Gowing, 2010 and D. cairae Whittington and Kearn, 2011 and is most similar to the former, distinguished only in that it lacks the strong, transverse, parallel ridges on the ventral body surface that characterise that species. It is more easily distinguished from D. cairae, differing in body shape, possession of a seminal receptacle, and relative position and size of the haptor. It may further differ from both species by fine details of the gut diverticula, although these details are difficult to ascertain. Spermatophores were observed in the new species, similar to those previously reported for D. cairae. The new species exhibits site attachment preference: infections were greatest on and immediately adjacent to the host pelvic fins (including male reproductive organs, i.e. claspers), moderate in proximity to the dorsal and pectoral fins, few on the caudal fin and peduncle, and infrequently, isolated worms occurred elsewhere on the dorsal and ventral surfaces of the body. There was no incidence of infection on the head (including rostrum). We presume D. pterophilus is restricted to P. zijsron and thus likely faces the same threat of extinction. Elsevier 2022-01-19 /pmc/articles/PMC8814595/ /pubmed/35141133 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijppaw.2022.01.006 Text en © 2022 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Ingelbrecht, Jack
Morgan, David L.
Lear, Karissa O.
Fazeldean, Travis
Lymbery, Alan J.
Norman, Bradley M.
Martin, Storm B.
A new microbothriid monogenean Dermopristis pterophilus n. sp. from the skin of the Critically Endangered green sawfish Pristis zijsron Bleeker, 1851 (Batoidea: Pristidae) in Western Australia
title A new microbothriid monogenean Dermopristis pterophilus n. sp. from the skin of the Critically Endangered green sawfish Pristis zijsron Bleeker, 1851 (Batoidea: Pristidae) in Western Australia
title_full A new microbothriid monogenean Dermopristis pterophilus n. sp. from the skin of the Critically Endangered green sawfish Pristis zijsron Bleeker, 1851 (Batoidea: Pristidae) in Western Australia
title_fullStr A new microbothriid monogenean Dermopristis pterophilus n. sp. from the skin of the Critically Endangered green sawfish Pristis zijsron Bleeker, 1851 (Batoidea: Pristidae) in Western Australia
title_full_unstemmed A new microbothriid monogenean Dermopristis pterophilus n. sp. from the skin of the Critically Endangered green sawfish Pristis zijsron Bleeker, 1851 (Batoidea: Pristidae) in Western Australia
title_short A new microbothriid monogenean Dermopristis pterophilus n. sp. from the skin of the Critically Endangered green sawfish Pristis zijsron Bleeker, 1851 (Batoidea: Pristidae) in Western Australia
title_sort new microbothriid monogenean dermopristis pterophilus n. sp. from the skin of the critically endangered green sawfish pristis zijsron bleeker, 1851 (batoidea: pristidae) in western australia
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8814595/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35141133
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijppaw.2022.01.006
work_keys_str_mv AT ingelbrechtjack anewmicrobothriidmonogeneandermopristispterophilusnspfromtheskinofthecriticallyendangeredgreensawfishpristiszijsronbleeker1851batoideapristidaeinwesternaustralia
AT morgandavidl anewmicrobothriidmonogeneandermopristispterophilusnspfromtheskinofthecriticallyendangeredgreensawfishpristiszijsronbleeker1851batoideapristidaeinwesternaustralia
AT learkarissao anewmicrobothriidmonogeneandermopristispterophilusnspfromtheskinofthecriticallyendangeredgreensawfishpristiszijsronbleeker1851batoideapristidaeinwesternaustralia
AT fazeldeantravis anewmicrobothriidmonogeneandermopristispterophilusnspfromtheskinofthecriticallyendangeredgreensawfishpristiszijsronbleeker1851batoideapristidaeinwesternaustralia
AT lymberyalanj anewmicrobothriidmonogeneandermopristispterophilusnspfromtheskinofthecriticallyendangeredgreensawfishpristiszijsronbleeker1851batoideapristidaeinwesternaustralia
AT normanbradleym anewmicrobothriidmonogeneandermopristispterophilusnspfromtheskinofthecriticallyendangeredgreensawfishpristiszijsronbleeker1851batoideapristidaeinwesternaustralia
AT martinstormb anewmicrobothriidmonogeneandermopristispterophilusnspfromtheskinofthecriticallyendangeredgreensawfishpristiszijsronbleeker1851batoideapristidaeinwesternaustralia
AT ingelbrechtjack newmicrobothriidmonogeneandermopristispterophilusnspfromtheskinofthecriticallyendangeredgreensawfishpristiszijsronbleeker1851batoideapristidaeinwesternaustralia
AT morgandavidl newmicrobothriidmonogeneandermopristispterophilusnspfromtheskinofthecriticallyendangeredgreensawfishpristiszijsronbleeker1851batoideapristidaeinwesternaustralia
AT learkarissao newmicrobothriidmonogeneandermopristispterophilusnspfromtheskinofthecriticallyendangeredgreensawfishpristiszijsronbleeker1851batoideapristidaeinwesternaustralia
AT fazeldeantravis newmicrobothriidmonogeneandermopristispterophilusnspfromtheskinofthecriticallyendangeredgreensawfishpristiszijsronbleeker1851batoideapristidaeinwesternaustralia
AT lymberyalanj newmicrobothriidmonogeneandermopristispterophilusnspfromtheskinofthecriticallyendangeredgreensawfishpristiszijsronbleeker1851batoideapristidaeinwesternaustralia
AT normanbradleym newmicrobothriidmonogeneandermopristispterophilusnspfromtheskinofthecriticallyendangeredgreensawfishpristiszijsronbleeker1851batoideapristidaeinwesternaustralia
AT martinstormb newmicrobothriidmonogeneandermopristispterophilusnspfromtheskinofthecriticallyendangeredgreensawfishpristiszijsronbleeker1851batoideapristidaeinwesternaustralia