Diversity of dactylogyrids parasitizing African catfishes (Siluriformes)

Investor logo

Warning

This publication doesn't include Faculty of Economics and Administration. It includes Faculty of Science. Official publication website can be found on muni.cz.
Authors

FRANCOVÁ Kateřina SEIFERTOVÁ Mária ŘEHULKOVÁ Eva

Year of publication 2019
Type Conference abstract
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Description During a survey of monogeneans parasitizing catfishes, a total of 11 species belonging to six families (Bagridae, Clariidae, Claroteidae, Malapteruridae, Mochokidae and Schilbeidae) were found to be infected with 27 species of dactylogyrids assigned to six genera: Bagrobdella (4 spp.), Protoancylodiscoides (2 spp.), Quadriacanthus (7 spp.), Schilbetrema (10 spp.), Schilbetrematoides (2 spp.), and Synodontella (2 spp.). The results indicate that our investigation covered a majority of dactylogyrid genera (i.e. all except Birgiellus and Paraquadriacanthus) currently known from catfishes in Africa. Furthermore, a DNA-based approach to identification of these parasites (25 species, 6 genera) was applied for the first time. Nine of the monogenean species found were identified as new to science. Quadriacanthus and Schilbetrema represent the most numerous genera accommodating dactylogyrids of African catfishes (Quadriacanthus spp. are known to infect members of Clariidae and Bagridae; Schilbetrema spp. and also Schilbetrematoides spp. are parasites of Schilbeidae). Phylogenetic analyses based on 18S-ITS1 and 28S rDNA sequences depicted six Quadriacanthus species, including those described by us (i.e. Q. fornicatus, Q. mandibulatus, Q. pravus, and Q. zuheiri). The observed interspecific genetic relationships among Quadriacanthus spp. from clariids and Q. bagrae from a bagrid host suggest a possible host-switching event in the evolutionary history of the genus...
Related projects:

You are running an old browser version. We recommend updating your browser to its latest version.