Abstract

Summary A new species of Ektaphelenchinae was recovered from the bark of a dead date palm (Phoenix dactylifera) tree, and from a soil sample collected from the rhizosphere of gramineous grasses in Iraq and Iran, respectively. It was assigned to the genus Ektaphelenchus mainly by the lack of a functional anus and rectum, and having a conical posterior body end (tail) in female, not ending to a filiform tip, and males lacking a bursa. The recovered populations were described based on morphological and molecular data. Ektaphelenchus phoenicis n. sp. is characterised by 346-441 μm long females, having three lines in lateral field, a 12.3-15.8 μm long stylet with wide lumen lacking basal knobs or swellings, high lip region separated from the rest of body by a depression, metacorpus elliptical with refractive valve plates almost in the middle to slightly posterior, excretory pore posterior to metacorpus, postvulval uterine sac (PUS) 9.3-14.8 μm long, usually containing sperm, posterior body end (tail) with ventrally bent distal end, males common in population with seven precloacal + cloacal + caudal papillae and slightly elevated cloacal lips under SEM, appearing as a differentiated flap-like structure under LM. The new species was morphologically compared with typologically similar species of Ektaphelenchus with a similar body size, namely: E. golestanicus, E. oleae and E. taiwanensis; a similar female posterior body end, namely: E. cupressi, E. kanzakii, E. prolobos and E. riograndensis; and E. goffarti having a similar postcloacal structure. The phylogenetic relationships of the new species with other relevant genera and species were reconstructed using near full length sequences of small and D2-D3 expansion segments of large subunit (SSU and LSU D2-D3) rDNA. In both inferred phylogenies, the newly generated sequences of Ektaphelenchus phoenicis n. sp. occupied a placement inside a maximally supported clade including sequences of three genera Ektaphelenchus, Ektaphelenchoides and Devibursaphelenchus.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call