Department of Zoology, 101 Matão Street, Tv. 14, University of São Paulo, SP 05508-090, Brazil.
Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, 75 North Eagleville Road, Unit 3043, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut 06269-3043.
J Parasitol. 2020 Nov 12;106(6):789-801. doi: 10.1645/19-192.
Examination of 4 specimens of the leopard whipray Himantura leoparda, a dasyatid stingray from northern Australia, led to the discovery of 3 new species of Rhinebothrium. Rhinebothrium leopardensis n. sp., Rhinebothrium nandoi n. sp., and Rhinebothrium ruhnkei n. sp. are described, increasing the diversity of the genus to 51 species globally. All 3 new species differ from their congeners in terms of testis number, proglottid number, loculus number, and size. With respect to one another, R. leopardensis n. sp. has bothridia that are weakly constricted at their centers and has a greater number of proglottids than the other 2 species (93-108 vs. 11-15, and 48-78, respectively). Rhinebothrium nandoi n. sp. is the smallest of the 3 species found in H. leoparda (3.6-5 vs. 10-15 mm and 10.1-15.8 mm in total length [TL], respectively) and bears bothridia that are constricted at their centers. Rhinebothrium ruhnkei n. sp. bears bothridia that are conspicuously constricted at their centers and has more testes than R. leopardensis and fewer than R. nandoi (7-10 vs. fewer than 7 and 21-33, respectively). Before this study, 56% (27 of 48) of Rhinebothrium species had been described from the freshwater river systems of South America and the marine waters surrounding South and North America. In contrast, despite the remarkably diverse nature of its batoid fauna, only 19 species were known from the Indo-Pacific region. Our work increases this number to 22, emphasizing the highly underestimated nature of Rhinebothrium diversity in this region of the globe. The discovery of these 3 new species was not unexpected, given the relatively poor status of our current knowledge of the cestode faunas of dasyatid stingrays in the Indo-Pacific region, and given the fact that it is common for a single batoid species to host 2 or more species of Rhinebothrium. Our results suggest that additional work on the cestode faunas of the batoids, especially dasyatids, from the Indo-Pacific region is likely to be highly productive in terms of contributing to the knowledge of Rhinebothrium diversity.
对来自澳大利亚北部的 4 个豹纹长尾刺魟(Himantura leoparda)标本的检查导致发现了 3 种新的 Rhinbothrium 物种。描述了新种 Rhinbothrium leopardensis n. sp.、Rhinbothrium nandoi n. sp. 和 Rhinbothrium ruhnkei n. sp.,使该属的全球物种多样性增加到 51 种。这 3 个新种在睾丸数量、节片数量、小室数量和大小方面与同属种不同。与其他种相比,Rhinbothrium leopardensis n. sp. 的中殖孔在中心处弱收缩,并且节片数量更多(93-108 对 11-15,和 48-78)。Rhinbothrium nandoi n. sp. 是在 H. leoparda 中发现的 3 种中最小的(全长分别为 3.6-5 毫米和 10-15 毫米和 10.1-15.8 毫米),并具有在中心处收缩的中殖孔。Rhinbothrium ruhnkei n. sp. 具有在中心处明显收缩的中殖孔,睾丸数量多于 Rhinbothrium leopardensis,少于 Rhinbothrium nandoi(7-10 对少于 7 和 21-33)。在本研究之前,56%(48 种中的 27 种)的 Rhinbothrium 物种已从南美洲的淡水河流系统和南美洲和北美洲周围的海洋水域中描述。相比之下,尽管其鳐鱼动物群的性质非常多样化,但仅从印度-太平洋地区就知道了 19 种。我们的工作将这个数字增加到 22,强调了在全球这个地区 Rhinbothrium 多样性被严重低估的事实。鉴于我们对印度-太平洋地区的鳐鱼科鱼类的绦虫区系的现有知识状况较差,并且鉴于一种鳐鱼通常会寄生 2 种或更多种 Rhinbothrium,因此发现这 3 种新种并不意外。我们的结果表明,对印度-太平洋地区的鳐鱼科鱼类(尤其是长尾刺魟)的绦虫区系进行更多的研究,很可能在增加对 Rhinbothrium 多样性的认识方面具有很高的成效。