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Morphological and molecular characteristics of Parasitodiplogaster religiosae n. sp. (Nematoda: Diplogastrina) associated with Ficus religiosa in China.

Yongsan ZengWensheng ZengYuan ZhangWeimin YeDongmei ChengNatsumi KanzakiRobin M Giblin-Davis
Published in: PloS one (2018)
A new nematode species of the genus Parasitodiplogaster was recovered from syconia of Ficus religiosa at the Guangxiao Temple, Guangzhou, China. It is described herein as P. religiosae n. sp. and is characterised by possessing the longest and thinnest spicule of all currently described males in the genus, an elongated laterally "ε-shaped" and ventrally rhomboid-like gubernaculum, a stoma without teeth, consisting of a ring-like cheilostom with indistinct anteriolateral projections, a tube-like gymnostom and a funnel-like stegostom, monodelphic with a mean vulval position of 66%. There are three pre-cloacal and six post-cloacal male genital papillae with the arrangement P1, P2, P3, (C, P4), P5, P6d, P7, P8, P9d, Ph. This new species was easily differentiated from other members of the genus by DNA sequences of partial small subunit rRNA gene (SSU) and the D2-D3 expansion segments of the large subunit rRNA gene (LSU). Phylogenetic analysis also corroborated its reasonable placement within a well-supported monophyletic clade with other Parasitodiplogaster species and within the australis-group that includes P. australis and P. salicifoliae that are all associates of fig wasp pollinators (Platyscapa sp.) of figs of the subsection Urostigma.
Keyphrases
  • copy number
  • genome wide
  • single molecule
  • circulating tumor
  • protein kinase
  • cell free
  • genetic diversity
  • nucleic acid
  • genome wide analysis
  • cone beam computed tomography