Login / Signup

Placobdelloides tridens sp. n., a new species of glossiphoniid leech (Hirudinea: Rhynchobdellida) found feeding on captive Orlitia borneensis in Thailand, and an update to the host distribution of P. siamensis.

Krittiya ChiangkulPoramad TrivalairatKirati KunyaWatchariya Purivirojkul
Published in: Systematic parasitology (2021)
A new glossiphoniid leech species, Placobdelloides tridens sp. n., is discovered on the Malayan Giant Turtle (Orlitia borneensis) at the Nakhon Ratchasima Zoo in Thailand. The morphological study of this new species revealed that it is distinguished from P. siamensis, a turtle leech species that can be found commonly in Thailand. Placobdelloides tridens presented the following diagnostic morphological characteristics: a pear-shaped and triannulate body, well-developed rod-like papillae on the dorsal surface, smooth posterior and anterior suckers with nominal pits inside, a single pair of dark contiguous eyes, light yellow-brown to greenish dorsal color, absence of median line, male and female gonopore separated by a single annulus and a unique trident shape at the tip of the crop ceca. The phylogenetic relationships of P. tridens sp. n., was clarified, and shown to be a sister clade to the P. siamensis and P. sirikanchanae clade. Furthermore, this is a new host record for P. siamensis, which was found on O. borneensis, Batagur affinis and B. borneoensis in the Khao Kheow Open Zoo, Chonburi, Thailand.
Keyphrases
  • spinal cord
  • neuropathic pain
  • optical coherence tomography
  • spinal cord injury
  • aortic valve
  • single cell
  • genetic diversity