ZooKeys (Sep 2018)

Morphological and molecular (28S rRNA) data of monogeneans (Platyhelminthes) infecting the gill lamellae of marine fishes in the Campeche Bank, southwest Gulf of Mexico

  • Edgar F. Mendoza-Franco,
  • Mariela del Carmen Rosado Tun,
  • Allan de Jesús Duarte Anchevida,
  • Rodolfo E. del Rio Rodríguez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.783.26218
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 783
pp. 125 – 161

Abstract

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During the examination of 913 fish specimens belonging to four families in the Campeche Bank (Gulf of Mexico), 23 gill ectoparasitic monogenean species were found, which belong to three families: Dactylogyridae, Microcotylidae and Diclidophoridae. The species Euryhaliotrema amydrum, E. carbuncularium, E. dunlapae, E. fajeravilae, E. fastigatum, E. longibaculum, E. paracanthi, E. tubocirrus, Haliotrematoides cornigerum, H. gracilihamus, H. heteracantha, H. longihamus, H. magnigastrohamus, H. striatohamus, Hamatopeduncularia bagre, Neotetraonchus bravohollisae, and N. felis (all Dactylogyridae) were found on the hosts Lutjanus synagris, L. griseus, Ariopsis felis, Bagre marinus, Archosargus rhomboidalis, and Haemulon plumieri. Additionally, Microcotyle archosargi, Microcotyle sp., and Microcotyloides incisa (all Microcotylidae) were found on L. griseus and A. rhomboidalis; finally, Choricotyle sp. 1, Choricotyle sp. 2, and Choricotyle sp. 3 (all Diclidophoridae) were found on H. plumieri. The prevalence, abundance, mean intensity of infection, and supplementary taxonomic revisions for all monogeneans found are provided. Partial sequences of the 28S rRNA gene were also obtained for monogeneans of ariid, sparid, and haemulid host fishes to explore their systematic position within the Monogenea. New locality and host records for some previously described species of Euryhaliotrema, Hamatopeduncularia, Microcotyle, and Choricotyle from lutjanid, ariid, sparid, and haemulid hosts were reported. The present study adds evidence supporting the interoceanic occurrence of the same monogenean species (on lutjanids) on the west-east Atlantic and Pacific Oceans (= amphiamerican species). As previously suggested, there are at least, two possibilities to explain that parasite distribution: differentiation of morphological features in these monogeneans have resulted in only slight to insignificant morphological changes developing over the extended period of 3.2 mya (when the Isthmus of Panama was closing) and/or speciation is only evident at molecular level.