Faunal change over 3 decades to reveal Rotundocollarette capoori n.gen., n.sp., a unique anisakid from Johnius dussumieri from the Central west coast of India at Goa
Tóm tắt
A unique anisakid roundworm, Rotundocollarette capoori n. gen., n.sp. infesting Johnius dussumieri from the Central West coast of India at Goa has been described. The worms are typically characterized by a cephalic collarette, a muscular collarette in post-caudal zone, intestinal caecum and a ventricular appendix. 3 pores, a part of cephalic infrastructure–a dorsal oral aperture, a dorso-laterally placed genital pore, and a sub-ventral excretory pore, at the junction of the bases of the 2 ventro-lateral lips, were typically unique as revealed by SEM studies. A pair of large squarish teeth flanked each of these three pores in the cephalic region, with 3–5 denticles in the median group, at the junction of the two arms of V-shaped structure, that joined 26–29 denticles on each arm of this V-shaped formation, running parallel and crossed past dentigerous ridges on each lip. In addition, a set of 49–50 medially organized denticles occupying the dorsal arm of V-shaped formation, in the medial space, were a conspicuous configuration, besides 70 min triangular denticles at the junction of sub-ventral lips. A spined mucron at the tip of tail. The key provided by Moravec and Justine (Parasite 27:58, 2020.
https://doi.org/10.1051/parasite/2020053
) to segregate Porrocaecum-like nematode genera (Porrocaecum, Pseudoterranova, Pulchrascaris, Euterranova, and Neoterranova) has been revised to include the newly proposed genus, Rotundocollarette capoori n.gen., n.sp. The significance of the emerging nematode as an environmental bioindicator has been specified.