Journal
JOURNAL OF PARASITOLOGY
Volume 107, Issue 1, Pages 74-88Publisher
ALLEN PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1645/20-96
Keywords
Monogenoidea; Polystomatidae; Chelonia; Southeastern United States; Mississippi
Categories
Funding
- Auburn University's Office of the Vice President for Research and Economic Development
- Southeastern Cooperative Fish Parasite and Disease Project (Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources)
- Alabama Agriculture Experiment Station
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This study describes multiple newly-collected specimens of Neopolystoma cf. orbiculare from the Comet Lake in Pascagoula River, Mississippi found in two alligator snapping turtles. The specimens showed unique characteristics and indicated polyphyletic nature of Neopolystoma genus, sharing a recent common ancestor with N. orbiculare. Additionally, this marks the first record of a polystomatid from Mississippi, from the Pascagoula River, and from the alligator snapping turtle.
Herein, we describe several newly-collected specimens of Neopolystoma cf. orbiculare from the urinary bladder of 2 alligator snapping turtles, Macrochelys temminckii (Troost in Harland, 1835) (Cryptodira: Chelydridae Gray, 1831) from Comet Lake (30 degrees 35'46.94 '' N, 88 degrees 36'3.12 '' W), Pascagoula River, Mississippi. Our specimens differed from all previous descriptions of N. orbiculare and its junior subjective synonyms by the combination of having intestinal ceca adorned with triangular pockets and that terminate dorsal to the haptor, distinctive hooklets each having a handle and guard of approximately equal length and having a much longer and curved blade, 16 genital coronet spines that each possess 1-2 flanges per spine, pre-testicular vaginal pores, and vaginal ducts that are anterior to the junction of the oviduct and genito-intestinal canal. Some of our specimens were enantiomorphic (4 and 3 had a dextral and sinistral ovary, respectively). Nucleotide sequences (large subunit ribosomal DNA [28S], small subunit ribosomal DNA [18S], and cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 mitochondrial gene [COI]) for our specimens were most similar to GenBank sequences ascribed to N. orbiculare. Single-gene and concatenated phylogenetic analyses confirmed that Neopolystoma Price, 1939 is polyphyletic and that our isolates share a recent common ancestor with those ascribed to N. orbiculare. This is the first record of a polystomatid from Mississippi, from the Pascagoula River, and from the alligator snapping turtle (and only the second species of Neopolystoma reported from any snapping turtle).
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