Abstract

Acanthocephalans are attractive candidates as model organisms for studying the ecology and co-evolutionary history of parasitic life cycles in the marine ecosystem. Adding to earlier molecular analyses of this taxon, a total of 36 acanthocephalans belonging to the classes Archiacanthocephala (3 species), Eoacanthocephala (3 species), Palaeacanthocephala (29 species), Polyacanthocephala (1 species) and Rotifera as outgroup (3 species) were analyzed by using Bayesian Inference and Maximum Likelihood analyses of nuclear 18S rDNA sequence. This data set included three re-collected and six newly collected taxa, Bolbosoma vasculosum from Lepturacanthus savala, Filisoma rizalinum from Scatophagus argus, Rhadinorhynchus pristis from Gempylus serpens, R. lintoni from Selar crumenophthalmus, Serrasentis sagittifer from Johnius coitor, and Southwellina hispida from Epinephelus coioides, representing 5 new host and 3 new locality records. The resulting trees suggest a paraphyletic arrangement of the Echinorhynchida and Polymorphida inside the Palaeacanthocephala. This questions the placement of the genera Serrasentis and Gorgorhynchoides within the Echinorhynchida and not the Polymorphida, necessitating further insights into the systematic position of these taxa based on morphology.

Highlights

  • The endoparasitic phylum Acanthocephala Kohlreuther, 1771 consists of about 1,150 species, belonging to 125 genera [1] and 19 families [2]

  • The present study is the most detailed phylogenetic analyses of the Acanthocephala so far based on small subunit (SSU) ribosomal DNA (rDNA), especially of the class Palaeacanthocephala

  • We can support the notion that the acanthocephalans are monophyletic in origin, and separate into four distinct classes [2,8,9]

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Summary

Introduction

The endoparasitic phylum Acanthocephala Kohlreuther, 1771 consists of about 1,150 species, belonging to 125 genera [1] and 19 families [2]. They are characterized by an evertable proboscis as the attachment organ, sexual dimorphism, males with cement glands and an uterine bell in females. Around 57% species of the Acanthocephala belong to the Palaeacanthocephala [1] with the two orders Echinorhynchida and Polymorphida. They show the highest species diversity and are the most common acanthocephalans of marine teleost fish

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