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Keywords = Desmodorida

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20 pages, 6287 KiB  
Article
The Discovery and Delimitation of a New Cryptic Species of Spirinia (Nematoda: Desmodoridae) Using SSU and LSU rDNA Divergence
by Kyeongmoon Son and Raehyuk Jeong
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2025, 13(7), 1251; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse13071251 - 28 Jun 2025
Viewed by 331
Abstract
The cosmopolitan nematode Spirinia parasitifera has long been considered a single, morphologically variable species; however, mounting molecular evidence suggests that it represents a complex of cryptic taxa. In this study, we describe Spirinia koreana sp. nov., a new species collected from intertidal sediments [...] Read more.
The cosmopolitan nematode Spirinia parasitifera has long been considered a single, morphologically variable species; however, mounting molecular evidence suggests that it represents a complex of cryptic taxa. In this study, we describe Spirinia koreana sp. nov., a new species collected from intertidal sediments of the Republic of Korea. The new species exhibits a high degree of morphological resemblance to both S. antipodea and S. parasitifera, with overlapping ranges in most morphological traits. While certain measurements, such as relatively shorter body length, more slender form (higher a ratio), moderately long tail length, and shorter spicule length differ from those in some described populations, no single morphological character alone reliably separates S. koreana from all previously reported specimens of S. parasitifera or S. antipodea. Nevertheless, molecular evidence from multiple genetic markers clearly supports its distinction as a separate species. Molecular data from mitochondrial COI, 18S rRNA, and 28S rRNA genes confirm the genetic distinctness of the Korean specimens from S. parasitifera and S. antipodea. Notably, S. koreana sp. nov. differs from other Spirinia species by 2.1–3.4% in 18S and up to 34.4% in 28S sequences, surpassing thresholds previously used to delimit marine nematode species. Our results emphasize the value of integrative taxonomy combining fine-scale morphology and multi-marker molecular data to uncover hidden diversity in meiofaunal nematodes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Biodiversity and Population Ecology of Marine Invertebrates)
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16 pages, 5381 KiB  
Article
First Record of a Rare New Species of Dracognomus (Nematoda: Draconematidae) from the Northwest Pacific Ocean
by Seungyeop Han and Hyun Soo Rho
Diversity 2024, 16(12), 776; https://doi.org/10.3390/d16120776 - 20 Dec 2024
Viewed by 846
Abstract
We report the discovery of a novel free-living marine nematode, Dracognomus elongatus sp. nov., from the genus Dracognomus Allen & Noffsinger, 1978 (Nematoda: Draconematidae), collected from geniculate coralline algal assemblages in the intertidal zone along the eastern coast of Korea in the Northwest [...] Read more.
We report the discovery of a novel free-living marine nematode, Dracognomus elongatus sp. nov., from the genus Dracognomus Allen & Noffsinger, 1978 (Nematoda: Draconematidae), collected from geniculate coralline algal assemblages in the intertidal zone along the eastern coast of Korea in the Northwest Pacific Ocean. Dracognomus elongatus sp. nov. is distinguished from its congeners by several key features: a relatively long body length (522 µm), densely developed minute spine-like ornamentation along the margins of body annules, small pore-shaped amphids (2 µm) with membranous tubes filled with corpus gelatum extending to the fifth body annule, twelve modified cephalic adhesion tubes located posterior to the rostrum, eight pairs of modified adhesion tubes in the mid-body region, an arrangement of both normal and modified subventral adhesion tubes (three pairs of each), disc-shaped tips on sublateral adhesion tubes, absence of copulatory thorns in males, and the presence of three pairs of short setae with no protuberances on the non-annulated tail end. Morphological details and illustrations were obtained using differential interference contrast microscopy. We also provide information on the geographic distribution and comparative characteristics of species within the genus Dracognomus, along with a schematic ventral view of a congener illustrating the arrangement of posterior adhesion tubes and copulatory thorns. Additionally, we present a species-level pictorial dichotomous key. Dracognomus elongatus sp. nov. is the eighth described species of this rare genus and marks the first record of Dracognomus in the Northwest Pacific Ocean. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Dynamics of Marine Communities)
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15 pages, 3777 KiB  
Article
Metachromadora parobscura sp. nov. and Molgolaimus longicaudatus sp. nov. (Nematoda, Desmodoridae) from Mangrove Wetlands of China
by Jing Sun and Yong Huang
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2024, 12(9), 1621; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse12091621 - 11 Sep 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 974
Abstract
Two new species of free-living marine nematodes, Metachromadora parobscura sp. nov. and Molgolaimus longicaudatus sp. nov., from mangrove wetlands of Beihai, Guangxi province in China, are described. Metachromadora parobscura sp. nov. is characterized by eight longitudinal rows of somatic setae arranged from the [...] Read more.
Two new species of free-living marine nematodes, Metachromadora parobscura sp. nov. and Molgolaimus longicaudatus sp. nov., from mangrove wetlands of Beihai, Guangxi province in China, are described. Metachromadora parobscura sp. nov. is characterized by eight longitudinal rows of somatic setae arranged from the posterior part of the body, loop-shaped amphidial foveae with an open top and double contours, pharynx with bipartite cuticularized internal cavity, spicules with well-developed capitulum, gubernaculum canoe-shaped, without apophysis, 6–8 precloacal tubular supplements, and a short, conical tail with two ventral protuberances. It could be easily distinguished from the known species by spicule length and numbers of precloacal supplements. Molgolaimus longicaudatus sp. nov. is characterized by short cephalic setae, relatively small amphidial fovea, slender spicules ventrally bent with pronounced hooked capitulum and tapered distal end, two poriform precloacal supplements, and a relatively long conico-cylindrical tail. It differs from other species by the shape of spicules and long tail. Nearly full-length SSU sequences (1542–1592 bp) of the two species were provided, and phylogenetic trees based on maximum likelihood analyses supported the taxonomic position of the two new species. The combined use of traditional morphology-based taxonomy and molecular approaches has been proven to be a good choice for identification of free-living nematodes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Marine Ecology)
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21 pages, 4452 KiB  
Article
Diversity of Cryptofaunal Nematode Assemblages along the Jardines de La Reina Coral Reef, Southern Cuba
by Diana Marzo-Pérez, Jose Andrés Pérez-García, Amy Apprill and Maickel Armenteros
Diversity 2024, 16(5), 264; https://doi.org/10.3390/d16050264 - 29 Apr 2024
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 1615
Abstract
Cryptofaunal nematodes, those living on the hard substrate of the coral reefs, are largely unknown in terms of diversity and assemblage structure. We described nematode assemblages at seven sites spanning about 200 km along Jardines de La Reina, a well-preserved reef system in [...] Read more.
Cryptofaunal nematodes, those living on the hard substrate of the coral reefs, are largely unknown in terms of diversity and assemblage structure. We described nematode assemblages at seven sites spanning about 200 km along Jardines de La Reina, a well-preserved reef system in the Greater Antilles. We identified about 3000 nematodes, mostly of the families Desmodoridae and Chromadoridae; the most abundant species were Croconema cinctum, Desmodora communis, and Euchromadora vulgaris. The regional richness was moderate with 70 observed species (0.95 confidence interval: 65–75 species) and 75 extrapolated species (0.95 CI: 68–83 species). This richness was lower than in other reef biotopes, maybe reflecting evolutionary constraints due to interactions with stony corals. The local expected richness at 100 individuals was similar among sites, with a median of 26 species (0.95 CI: 20–34 species), and likely caused by diversification rate and evolutionary time acting at the same pace on populations. The taxonomic β-diversity was high and without differences among sites (median: 0.85; 0.95 CI: 0.33–1), probably due to significant substrate heterogeneity at 10-cm scale. The prevalence of replacement over richness difference suggests that local processes (e.g., environmental filtering and competition) contribute more to β-diversity than niche availability, which would be largely similar across the reef terraces. Contrary to our expectations, no gradient of assemblage structure occurred, nor significant effect of benthic cover on nematodes. However, nematode functional structure showed a conservative set of biological traits reflecting adaptations to hydrodynamic regime: armed oral cavity/intermediate colonizing capability/ornamented cuticles/conical tail. Our results provide insights about the taxonomic and functional diversity of nematodes and highlight the vast knowledge gaps about the processes ruling the meiofauna community structure in coral reefs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Ecology and Paleoecology of Atlantic and Caribbean Coral Reefs)
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28 pages, 8646 KiB  
Article
Acanthopharynx Marine Nematodes (Nematoda, Chromadoria, Desmodoridae) Dwelling in Tropical Demosponges: Integrative Taxonomy with Description of a New Species
by Alexei Tchesunov, Patricia Rodríguez García, Ulyana Simakova and Vadim Mokievsky
Diversity 2023, 15(1), 48; https://doi.org/10.3390/d15010048 - 1 Jan 2023
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2568
Abstract
In the exploration of the meiofauna associated with sponges and corals in the shallows of Cuba, we investigated nine species of sponges (Demospongia), wherein 26 nematode species were revealed. Most nematode specimens (50–95% of all individuals) in all sponge samples belonged to the [...] Read more.
In the exploration of the meiofauna associated with sponges and corals in the shallows of Cuba, we investigated nine species of sponges (Demospongia), wherein 26 nematode species were revealed. Most nematode specimens (50–95% of all individuals) in all sponge samples belonged to the family Desmodoridae (order Desmodorida), followed by the family Chromadoridae (order Chromadorida). A major part of Desmodoridae is constituted by the genus Acanthopharynx. A statistical morphometric analysis (principal component analysis and multidimensional scaling with testing via analysis of similarities) revealed two close cohorts that differed in size and pharynx shape. Molecular genetic analyses (COI, 18S, and 28S) also distinguished two groups of specimens that corresponded to morphometric cohorts. Based on the morphometry and molecular genetics, the larger-sized group was defined as Acanthopharynx micans (Eberth, 1873), while the smaller-sized group was considered A. parva sp. n. In light of the taxonomic review of the Acanthopharynx, emended generic diagnosis, and the annotated list of ten valid species, A. parva sp. n. differed from other Acanthopharynx species by its peculiar shape of the pharynx (gradually widened to cardia), smaller body size, and pattern of precloacal organs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Meiofauna: Biodiversity, Ecology and Role in Ecosystems)
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15 pages, 8436 KiB  
Article
A New Species of Free-Living Nematodes (Desmodorida, Desmodoridae) in the Romanian Black Sea Waters
by Mihaela Mureșan, Rozalia Motoc, Selma Menabit, Adrian Teacă and Tatiana Begun
Diversity 2022, 14(11), 933; https://doi.org/10.3390/d14110933 - 31 Oct 2022
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2845
Abstract
The paper reports the record of Pseudochromadora gomoi sp.n. in circalittoral habitats (at depths of 47–59 m) of the Romanian Black Sea waters. The species is characterized by a unispiral amphidial fovea, the presence of lateral alae stretching from the posterior end of [...] Read more.
The paper reports the record of Pseudochromadora gomoi sp.n. in circalittoral habitats (at depths of 47–59 m) of the Romanian Black Sea waters. The species is characterized by a unispiral amphidial fovea, the presence of lateral alae stretching from the posterior end of the cardia to the level of the cloacal opening, but also shows unique features found in other Desmodorida genera (i.e., the presence of a precloacal ventral ala in males similar to several Desmodora or Echinodesmodora species and eight subcephalic setae on the head capsule). The presence of a constrictor cuticle ring and orange elongated ducts in the anterior body part as in Pseudodesmodora lacrima, Leduc and Wharton, 2010, were also noted. The morphometric measurements of our species differ from most of the Pseudochromadora species reported in specialty literature. We extracted and counted all desmodorid individuals from 9 meiobenthic samples collected in June 2020, and performed a detailed morphological analysis of 12 individuals (5 females and 7 males) belonging to our species, also highlighting the dissimilarities with the related desmodorid species. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Meiofauna: Biodiversity, Ecology and Role in Ecosystems)
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16 pages, 3934 KiB  
Article
Effect of Static Magnetic Fields on the Composition of Marine Biofouling in Seawater Transportation Pipelines
by Carol Ostojic, Génesis Serrano, Pablo Ferrada, Mauricio Escalona, Victor Jiménez, María Teresa González, Alejandro Maureira, Antonio Panico, Manuel Zapata and Mariella Rivas
Water 2022, 14(21), 3362; https://doi.org/10.3390/w14213362 - 23 Oct 2022
Viewed by 2927
Abstract
The use of seawater for mining purposes in Chile has progressively increased in recent years as fast as the interest on the negative effects of biofouling on the inner part of pipelines used to transport seawater. To prevent biofouling, chemical antifouling compounds are [...] Read more.
The use of seawater for mining purposes in Chile has progressively increased in recent years as fast as the interest on the negative effects of biofouling on the inner part of pipelines used to transport seawater. To prevent biofouling, chemical antifouling compounds are traditionally used, thus, causing negative environmental impacts. The aim of this research has, therefore, been to evaluate the efficiency of static magnetic fields (SMF) generators to mitigate the biofouling. Hence, experimental activities have been conducted on high density polyethylene (HDPE) pipes equipped with neodymium magnets during two experimental periods in the year of 2019, i.e., autumn–winter (A–W) and spring–summer (S–S), and under two types of SMF, i.e., continuous-type (PCS) and pulse-type (PPS). Physicochemical parameters and cell viability of microorganisms composing the biofilm were investigated. Metagenomic analyses on biofilm were conducted as well. The results showed that the cell viability was the highest, i.e., 757,780 cells/cm2, during S–S and the lowest, i.e., 349,151 cells/cm2, in A–W, both under PCS. In S–S, as well as A–W, biofilm was characterized for the most abundant eukaryotic operational taxonomic units (OTUs) under PPS conditions. The presence of OTUs, such as Articiflavibacter spp., Chaetonotida spp. and Desmodorida spp., was observed only from SMF tests. Full article
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