Description, life cycle, and phylogenetics of Proterometra wigglewomble n. sp. (Digenea: Azygiidae) from the Cahaba River, Alabama, U.S.A.
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Regional Euro-Asian Biological Invasions Centre
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Abstract
We herein describe Proterometra wigglewomble n. sp. (Digenea: Azygiidae: Azygiinae) from
the Cahaba River, Alabama, USA, which asexually
reproduces in the compact elimia, Elimia showalteri
(Lea, 1860) (Cerithioidea: Pleuroceridae) and matures
in the oesophagus of the blackbanded darter, Percina
nigrofasciata (Agassiz, 1854) (Perciformes: Percidae).
Adults of the new species differ from congeners by having a small body and eggs having a wholly fimbriated
surface that appears as a cilia-like brush border. Live
naturally-shed cercariae of the new species differ from
those of its congeners by having a strongly claviform
tail stem bearing aspinose mammillae, a single furca,
excretory pores that open on the posterior margin of
the single furca, and few eggs in the cercarial distome.
The behaviour of the cercaria further differentiates the
new species. Naturally-shed cercariae of P. wigglewomble secrete a jelly-like adhesive that coats the surface of
the furca and evidently facilitates attachment to the surface of glass, plastic, and snail shell. Attached cercariae
vigorously wiggle and thrash about once attached, as if
mimicking the larva of a stream insect so as to lure the
blackbanded darter to eat it. Phylogenetic analyses recovered monophyletic Azygiidae, comprising monophyletic Leuceruthrinae Goldberger, 1911 and polyphyletic
Azygiinae Lühe, 1909. The present study is the largest
taxon sampling for Azygiidae and the first to include 28S
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Truong, T.N., Whelan, N.V., Johnson, P.D., Buntin, M.L. and Bullard, S.A., 2024. Description, life cycle, and phylogenetics of Proterometra wigglewomble n. sp.(Digenea: Azygiidae) from the Cahaba River, Alabama, USA. Systematic Parasitology, 101(1), p.9.
