Neotobrilus nicsmolae n. sp. (Tobrilidae: Nematoda) and Chronogaster carolinensis n. sp. (Chronogasteridae: Nematoda) from Lake Phelps, North Carolina

Two new species, Neotobrilus nicsmolae n. sp. and Chronogaster carolinensis n. sp. are described from a small, acidic, temperate, natural lake in North Carolina. N. nicsmolae n. sp. comes close to three members of the genus reported from North America, N. filipjevi, N. longus, and N. hopei. However,...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of nematology Vol. 45; no. 1; pp. 66 - 77
Main Authors Abebe, Eyualem, Ferebee, Briana, Taylor, Tarreyca, Mundo-Ocampo, Manuel, Mekete, Tesfamariam, De Ley, Paul
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States The Society of Nematologists 01.03.2013
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Two new species, Neotobrilus nicsmolae n. sp. and Chronogaster carolinensis n. sp. are described from a small, acidic, temperate, natural lake in North Carolina. N. nicsmolae n. sp. comes close to three members of the genus reported from North America, N. filipjevi, N. longus, and N. hopei. However, N. nicsmolae is unique with in the genus in having a combination of characters: size smaller than 1,700 μm, shorter outer labial and cephalic setae, tail shorter than 250 μm, last ventromedian supplement close (about 5 μm) to cloacal opening, spicule length of 61 to 85 μm, flagelloid sperm, and possession of subterminal setae. Assessment of relationships among clades within the Triplonchida using DNA sequences of the D2D3 expansion segment of the LSU rDNA showed that the family Trichodoridae and the genus Tripyla were recovered as monophyletic. The genus Tobrilus was recovered as monophyletic in the neighbor-joining and maximum likelihood trees, but that was not so in the maximum-parsimony tree. The separation among genera of the Trichodoridae, i.e., Trichodorus and Paratrichodorus, was not clear-cut in all phylograms. Chronogaster carolinensis n. sp. in having one ventral mucro with no spine and vacuolated lateral glandular bodies comes close to C. typica and C. ethiopica but differs from all hitherto known species in a combination of characteristics: in having long cephalic setae, long stoma, crystalloid bodies, vacuolated lateral glandular bodies, and a tail terminus with blunt ventral mucro, and its lack of lateral line.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
This work was supported in part by the U.S. Army Research Laboratory and U.S. Army Research Office under Contract number W911N7-08-1-0402 and U.S. National Science Foundation Award Number 0808632 through grants to EA. The authors thank Dr. Quing Yu, curator at the Canadian National Collection of Insects, for the loan of a type specimen of Neotobrilus filipjevi.
This paper was edited by Zafar Handoo.
Email: Ebabebe@mail.ecsu.edu
ISSN:0022-300X