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Eight species of Lintonium Stunkard & Nigrelli, 1930 (Digenea: Fellodistomidae) in Australian tetraodontiform fishes.

Thomas H CribbStorm B MartinPablo E DiazRodney A BrayScott C Cutmore
Published in: Systematic parasitology (2021)
We report eight species of Lintonium from tetraodontiform fishes from Australian waters and describe six of them as new. Two species are described from tetraodontids from the Great Barrier Reef (GBR): Lintonium kostadinovae n. sp. from Arothron nigropunctatus (Bloch & Schneider) and Arothron hispidus (Linnaeus); and Lintonium droneni n. sp. from A. nigropunctatus. Two species are described from temperate monacanthids: Lintonium crowcrofti n. sp. from Meuschenia hippocrepis (Quoy & Gaimard) and Meuschenia freycineti (Quoy & Gaimard) off Tasmania and from M. hippocrepis off Glenelg, South Australia and off Fremantle, Western Australia; and Lintonium blendi n. sp. from M. hippocrepis off Stanley, Tasmania. The final two new species are described from tropical monacanthids: Lintonium currani n. sp. from Cantherhines pardalis (Rüppell) from Ningaloo Reef, Western Australia; and Lintonium madhaviae n. sp. from Amanses scopas (Cuvier) from the southern GBR. Two previously described species are reported from tetraodontids: Lintonium pulchrum (Johnston, 1913) Yamaguti, 1954 from Arothron stellatus (Anonymous), A. hispidus, A. manilensis (Marion de Procé) and Lagocephalus lunaris (Bloch & Schneider) from the GBR and southern Queensland; and Lintonium consors (Lühe, 1906) Crowcroft, 1950 from A. nigropunctatus from the southern GBR. Sequence data for three markers (ITS2 and 28S rDNA and cox1 mtDNA) for six of the eight species (L. crowcrofti n. sp., L. currani n. sp., L. droneni n. sp., L. kostadinovae n. sp., L. madhaviae n. sp. and L. pulchrum) are the first for the genus and distinguish each species unambiguously. Many records of species of Lintonium, especially widespread records of the type species, L. vibex (Linton, 1900) Stunkard & Nigrelli, 1930, remain to be clarified. A key finding of the present study is that three fish species (A. hispidus, A. nigropunctatus and M. hippocrepis) are identified as harbouring either two or three species of Lintonium at individual localities.
Keyphrases
  • genetic diversity
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • south africa
  • climate change
  • deep learning