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Pratylenchus hippeastri n. sp. (Nematoda: Pratylenchidae) from amaryllis in Florida with notes on P. scribneri and P. hexincisus
Abstract A new root-lesion nematode Pratylenchus hippeastri n. sp. is described from amaryllis (Hippeastrum spp.) in Florida. The new species is characterised by a combination of the following morphological features of females: slender body, flat, plain and smooth face, head with two lip annuli, an...
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Published in: | Nematology : international journal of fundamental and applied nematological research 2007-01, Vol.9 (1), p.25-42 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Abstract
A new root-lesion nematode Pratylenchus hippeastri n. sp. is described from
amaryllis (Hippeastrum spp.) in Florida. The new species is characterised by
a combination of the following morphological features of females: slender
body, flat, plain and smooth face, head with two lip annuli, an incomplete
third annulus, and with second lip annulus thicker than first, ellipsoidal
stylet knobs, rectangular empty spermatheca with large round cavity, and
conoid tail with bluntly pointed terminus usually showing a ventral
constriction, or subhemispherical and smooth. The ranges of morphometric
characters of P. hippeastri n. sp. overlap with those of P. scribneri and P.
hexincisus. These three species also share some morphological and biological
features such as two lip annuli, an empty spermatheca and similar lateral
fields, but differ in the morphology of head patterns (smooth face in P.
hippeastri n. sp. vs divided face in the others) and tail termini
(hemispherical and subhemispherical in P. scribneri and subdigitate in P.
hexincisus vs bluntly pointed in P. hippeastri n. sp.). A reference
population of P. scribneri from Ohio and one of P. hexincisus from Tennessee
were obtained during the course of unsuccessful attempts to recover P.
scribneri at the type locale in Tennessee. The D3 rDNA sequences of the
reference populations matched GenBank sequences for these two species. Small
morphological differences between the P. scribneri population from Ohio and
the P. scribneri lectotype occurred in the shape of stylet knobs
(ellipsoidal vs round) and spermatheca (round with a central cavity vs
oblong) and also in the length of the pharyngeal overlap (longer in the
reference population). These morphological differences cast doubt about the
identity of the lectotype, which may be P. hexincisus. New morphological
details were obtained for P. hexincisus from Tennessee, which included a
divided face, an almost rectangular empty spermatheca with a central cavity
and subdigitate tail termini. Based on our phylogenetic inferences from DNA
sequences P. hippeastri n. sp. is more closely related to P. zeae and a
Florida population of P. loosi than to P. scribneri or P. hexincisus. |
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ISSN: | 1388-5545 1568-5411 |
DOI: | 10.1163/156854107779969754 |