Abstract

Longidorus cheni sp. n., an amphimictic species recovered from the rhizosphere of Larix principis-rupprechtii and Pyracantha fortuneana in Shanxi and Beijing, China, is described and illustrated. The taxonomic position of L. cheni sp. n. among other species within the genus was elucidated using morphometric and molecular data, and phylogenetic relationships were inferred using D2–D3 expansion domains of 28S and 18S rRNA genes by Bayesian Inference (BI) method. The new species is characterised by females with a medium body size (L = 4.9–6.6 mm), a lip region slightly expanded, broadly rounded frontally and laterally, the amphidial fovea broad and symmetrically bilobed at base, odontostyle long and slender (143–168 μm), odonthophore slightly swollen at the base, tail short bluntly conoid to rounded. Guide ring located far posterior from the oral aperture (70–93 μm). Males with two ad-cloacal pairs of supplements preceded by a row of 10–14 ventromedian supplements, with robust spicules measuring 111–126 μm along the median line. Three juvenile stages were present, tail shape of J1 elongate conoid while in J2 and J3 the tail gradually becomes bluntly rounded. Codes for identifying the new species are: A6-B3-C5-D2-E2-F3-G1-H1-I2-J2-K2. Longidorus cheni sp. n. belongs to a group of species with a guide ring at the mid-odontostyle position that have a predominantly Asiatic origin. It differs from all of them by a combination of morphological characters and unique sequences of partial 18S and D2–D3 region of 28S rRNA genes. The percentage dissimilarities in partial 18S and D2–D3 28S rRNA genes of L. cheni to the closest species (L. litchii, L. fangi, L. jonesi and L. juglans) were 1.5 %–1.8 % and 16.8–18.3 %, respectively.

Highlights

  • Longidorids, despite their long history of research (the first species of the family Longidorus elongatus was described almost one hundred and fifty years ago) continue to attract the attention of scientists due to their high species diversity, wide distribution, and economic importance

  • Longidorus cheni sp. n. belongs to a group of species (L. jonesi-group) having guide ring at mid-odontostyle area (Xu et al 2017) which consists of L. diadecturus Eveleigh & Allen, 1982, L. fursti Heyns, Coomans, Hutsebaut & Swart, 1987, L. himalayensis (Khan, 1986) Xu & Hooper, 1990, L. ishigakiensis Hirata, 2002, L. jagerae Heyns & Swart, 1998, L. jonesi Siddiqi, 1962, L. juglans, L. laricis Hirata, 1995, L. litchii, L. macromucronatus Siddiqi, 1962, L. martini Merny, 1966, L. naganensis Hirata, 1995, L. orongorongensis Yeates, Van Etteger & Hooper, 1992, and L. waikouaitii Yeates, Boag & Brown, 1997 (See Tables 3 and 4)

  • Our findings on the morphology and genetics of L. cheni sp. n. are in agreement with the hypothesis about the common origin of Longidorus species having a guide ring at the mid-odontostyle area (Xu et al 2017); these species have the odontophore base slightly or strongly flanged and bluntly rounded to a hemispherical tail (code H1(2))

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Summary

Introduction

Longidorids, despite their long history of research (the first species of the family Longidorus elongatus (de Man, 1876) was described almost one hundred and fifty years ago) continue to attract the attention of scientists due to their high species diversity, wide distribution, and economic importance. Present records of Longidorus distribution in mainland China reported by Guo et al (2011) and Xu et al (2017) include 16 species, half of which were originally described from the country: L. jiangsuensis Xu & Hooper, 1990, L. fangi Xu & Cheng 1991, L. henanus Xu & Cheng 1992, L. litchii Xu & Cheng 1992, L. hangzhouensis Zheng, Peng, Robbins & Brown, 2001, L. camelliae Zheng, Peneva & Brown, 2000, L. asiaticus Triscuizzi, ArchidonaYuste, Troccoli, Fanelli, Luca, Vovlas & Castillo, 2015 and L. juglans Xu, Ye, Wang, Zeng & Zhao, 2017. Molecular approaches and phylogenetic studies in combination with morphometric characters are used as a taxonomic standard for species identification and delimitation (Gutiérrez-Gutiérrez et al 2013, Peneva et al 2013, Archidona-Yuste et al 2016).

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