Morphological and biological study of Rhabdias spp. (Nematoda) from african chameleons with description of a new species

Lung-dwelling females of Rhabdias (Rhabdiasidae), and possible migrating ceolomic young females were searched for in 46 chameleons, belonging to seven species. Rhabdias chamaeleonis, the single species identified to date in Africa, was found in Chamaeleo (Trioceros) johnstoni and C. (T.) hoehnelii,...

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Main Authors: Lhermitte-Vallarino N., Bain O.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2004-03-01
Series:Parasite
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/parasite/200411115
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spelling doaj-db72dfcab4b5457589cc07e31458472b2021-02-02T01:12:53ZengEDP SciencesParasite1252-607X1776-10422004-03-01111153110.1051/parasite/200411115parasite2004111p15Morphological and biological study of Rhabdias spp. (Nematoda) from african chameleons with description of a new speciesLhermitte-Vallarino N.Bain O.Lung-dwelling females of Rhabdias (Rhabdiasidae), and possible migrating ceolomic young females were searched for in 46 chameleons, belonging to seven species. Rhabdias chamaeleonis, the single species identified to date in Africa, was found in Chamaeleo (Trioceros) johnstoni and C. (T.) hoehnelii, and redescribed ; the sizes of the buccal capsule and oesophagus were stable compared to the length of the female parasites, which varied from 6 mm to 22 mm in length. A second species, R. jarki n, sp., was identified from one C. (T.) johnstoni ; it differed from R. chamaeleonis in the shape of anterior region, the longer and slender oesophagus (ratio bulb diameter-body diameter at that level about 1/5 instead of 1/2), the arrangement of the head papillae, the shape of the buccal capsule, and the anatomy of the genital apparatus : one of the ovaries (the anterior or posterior one according to the specimen) had a band of small cells, among larger ovocytes of the synapsis zone, which were likely to generate the spermatozoa present in the oviducts, whereas these two elements were absent from R. chamaeleonis. The parasitic females of R. jarki thus appeared to be hermaphroditic, whereas those of R. chamaeleonis appeared to be parthenogenetic. The free living phase of these Rhabdias species was heterogonic. The infective larva of R. chamaeleonis was 360-590 µm long, unmotile and at third stage inside the maternal cuticle. The free-living male of R. jarki was described. The numerous infective larvae recovered from cultures of unidentified Rhabdias were all in maternal cuticle (one larva/female instead of two as in R. gemellipara from Calumma parsonii, from Madagascar) and two kinds of larvae were identified, R. chamaeleonis and larvae 700-900 µm long provisionally identified to R. jarki. The behaviour of infective larvae and a few successful infections of insects suggest that, in the field, insect transport hosts are involved in transmission and in preventing infective larvae from drying out.http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/parasite/200411115Rhabdiasidaelungchameleonsmorphologyparthenogenyhermaphrodismfree-living cycletransmissiontransport host
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lhermitte-Vallarino N.
Bain O.
spellingShingle Lhermitte-Vallarino N.
Bain O.
Morphological and biological study of Rhabdias spp. (Nematoda) from african chameleons with description of a new species
Parasite
Rhabdiasidae
lung
chameleons
morphology
parthenogeny
hermaphrodism
free-living cycle
transmission
transport host
author_facet Lhermitte-Vallarino N.
Bain O.
author_sort Lhermitte-Vallarino N.
title Morphological and biological study of Rhabdias spp. (Nematoda) from african chameleons with description of a new species
title_short Morphological and biological study of Rhabdias spp. (Nematoda) from african chameleons with description of a new species
title_full Morphological and biological study of Rhabdias spp. (Nematoda) from african chameleons with description of a new species
title_fullStr Morphological and biological study of Rhabdias spp. (Nematoda) from african chameleons with description of a new species
title_full_unstemmed Morphological and biological study of Rhabdias spp. (Nematoda) from african chameleons with description of a new species
title_sort morphological and biological study of rhabdias spp. (nematoda) from african chameleons with description of a new species
publisher EDP Sciences
series Parasite
issn 1252-607X
1776-1042
publishDate 2004-03-01
description Lung-dwelling females of Rhabdias (Rhabdiasidae), and possible migrating ceolomic young females were searched for in 46 chameleons, belonging to seven species. Rhabdias chamaeleonis, the single species identified to date in Africa, was found in Chamaeleo (Trioceros) johnstoni and C. (T.) hoehnelii, and redescribed ; the sizes of the buccal capsule and oesophagus were stable compared to the length of the female parasites, which varied from 6 mm to 22 mm in length. A second species, R. jarki n, sp., was identified from one C. (T.) johnstoni ; it differed from R. chamaeleonis in the shape of anterior region, the longer and slender oesophagus (ratio bulb diameter-body diameter at that level about 1/5 instead of 1/2), the arrangement of the head papillae, the shape of the buccal capsule, and the anatomy of the genital apparatus : one of the ovaries (the anterior or posterior one according to the specimen) had a band of small cells, among larger ovocytes of the synapsis zone, which were likely to generate the spermatozoa present in the oviducts, whereas these two elements were absent from R. chamaeleonis. The parasitic females of R. jarki thus appeared to be hermaphroditic, whereas those of R. chamaeleonis appeared to be parthenogenetic. The free living phase of these Rhabdias species was heterogonic. The infective larva of R. chamaeleonis was 360-590 µm long, unmotile and at third stage inside the maternal cuticle. The free-living male of R. jarki was described. The numerous infective larvae recovered from cultures of unidentified Rhabdias were all in maternal cuticle (one larva/female instead of two as in R. gemellipara from Calumma parsonii, from Madagascar) and two kinds of larvae were identified, R. chamaeleonis and larvae 700-900 µm long provisionally identified to R. jarki. The behaviour of infective larvae and a few successful infections of insects suggest that, in the field, insect transport hosts are involved in transmission and in preventing infective larvae from drying out.
topic Rhabdiasidae
lung
chameleons
morphology
parthenogeny
hermaphrodism
free-living cycle
transmission
transport host
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/parasite/200411115
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