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Several new and known Digenea are measured and described; Zoogonidae: Zoogonoides kamegaii sp. n., Zoogonoides anampsi sp. n., Deretrema ludwicki sp. n. and Lecithostaphylus pomacentri sp. n.; Monorchiidae: Lasiotocus himezi Yamaguti, 1951; Opecoelidae: Paradactylostomum saipanensis g. n. sp. n., Pseudopecoeloides capucini sp. n., Pseudopecoeloides wekeula Yamaguti, 1970, Pseudopecoeloides sp., Apertile overstreeti sp. n., Plagioporus (Caudotestis) seychellensis sp. n. and Podocotyloides stenometra Pritchard, 1966; Callodistomidae: Guptatrema papillonae sp. n.; and Opistholebetidae: Maculifer subaequiporus Nicoll, 1915.
New and known trematodes are discussed, immature worms are not taken under consideration. Trematodes mentioned are: Apocreadiidae: Apocreadium balistis Manter, 1947; Acanthocolpidae: Stephanostomum casum (Linton, 1910) McFarlane, 1934; Hemiuridae: Tubulovesicula lycodontis sp. n.; Lecithocladium chingi Manter et Pritchard, 1960.
Studies on fish embryogenesis have demonstrated that, although the yolk sac in most fish is spherical or subspherical and is definitely uniform in its architecture throughout, its shape in some cyprinid species (bream, sun bass, bleak and others) changes considerably during late organogenesis. The changes involve a rapid and conspicuous division of the yolk into two parts; the proximal one occupies about three quarters of the yolk volume and is spherical, while the caudal part, a quarter of the yolk volume, becomes elongated or even cylindrical. The yolk sac walls in the caudal part were observed to pulsate rhythmically, thus preceding the pulsation of the budding heart. It may be contended that the yolk sac wall pulsation causes mixing of the internal fluids in the developing embryo, an activity and role preceding that played by the central part of the emerging circulatory system, i. e., the heart.
Vitellogenesis and vitellocytes of the bothriocephalidean cestode Clestobothrium crassiceps (Rudolphi, 1819), a parasite of the teleost fish Merluccius merluccius (L., 1758), were studied by means of transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and cytochemistry. During vitellogenesis, four developmental stages were distinguished at the TEM level: (I) a stem cell stage of the gonial type; (II) an early differentiation stage, predominantly exhibiting lipid and protein synthetic activity; (III) an advanced differentiation or vitellocyte maturation stage, primarily exhibiting active glycogenesis still accompanied by an increase in lipid accumulation; and (IV) a mature vitellocyte stage. Vitellogenesis involves: (1) an increase in cell volume; (2) an extensive development of parallel, frequently concentrically arranged, cisternae of granular endoplasmic reticulum (GER) that produce dense, proteinaceous shell-gobules; (3) the development of Golgi complexes engaged in the packaging of this material; (4) an accelerated accumulation of unsaturated and saturated lipid droplets, along with their continuous enlargement and fusion; (5) the formation of individual β-glycogen particles and α-glycogen rosettes and their accumulation in the form of glycogen islands scattered among lipid droplets in the cytoplasm of maturing and mature vitellocytes; and (6) the rapid accumulation of large, saturated lipid droplets accompanied by dense accumulations of α- and β-glycogen along with proteinaceous shell-globules or shell-globule clusters in the peripheral layer during the advanced stage of vitellocyte maturation. Vitellogenesis in C. crassiceps generally resembles that previously described for three other bothriocephalideans, but differs from that of other cestode orders. Cytochemical staining with periodic acid-thiocarbazide-silver proteinate for glycogen indicates a strongly positive reaction for β-glycogen particles and α-glycogen rosettes, which form several large glycogen accumulations around the large, saturated lipid droplets of maturing and mature vitellocytes. Some hypotheses concerning the interrelationships between patterns of vitellogenesis, the possible modes of egg formation, embryonic development and life cycles in cestodes, and their phylogenetic implications are commented upon.
Background. In teleost fishes, the brain is the target organ for sex steroid hormones. The actions of sex steroid hormones are mediated by their receptors and play an important role in the regulation of endocrine function in the brain. Japanese medaka, Oryzias latipes, is a species widely used in many fields of experimental biology, including neurobiology. In this study, we examined the mRNA expression levels of androgen and estrogen receptors in medaka brains. Materials and Methods. The brains of adult fish were separated into three parts (forebrain, midbrain and hindbrain). The expression levels of androgen receptor (AR) and estrogen receptor (ER) β from each part of the brain were determined using a semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis. Results. AR and ERβ levels in males were higher in the forebrain and midbrain than in the hindbrain. In females, AR and ERβ levels were higher in the forebrain than in the midbrain and hindbrain. AR levels in the forebrain and midbrain of males were higher than those of females. Conversely, there was no difference in ERβ level between males and females. Conclusion. These data on hormone receptors provide the foundation for understanding the molecular basis of AR and ERβ mRNA expression levels in medaka brains. In addition, our results suggest that, in Japanese medaka, AR, but not ERβ, expression may exhibit sexual dimorphisms between males and females in the forebrains and midbrains.
The phylogenetic relationships of representative species of the superfamily Lepocreadioidea were assessed using partial lsrDNA and nad1 sequences. Forty-two members of the family Lepocreadiidae, six putative members of the Enenteridae, six gyliauchenid species and one Gorgocephalidae, were studied along with 22 species representing 8 families. The Lepocreadioidea is found to be monophyletic, except for the two species of the putative enenterid genus Cadenatella, which are found to be only distantly related to the lepocreadioids. The Lepocreadioidea is formed of five clades in a polytomy, the Gorgocephalidae, a clade containing the Enenteridae and Gyliauchenidae, a small clade of atypical lepocreadiines and the deep-sea lepidapedine lepocreadiids, a small clade consisting of a freshwater form and a group of shallow-water putative lepidapedines and the final clade includes the remaining lepocreadiids. Thus, the generally accepted concept of the Lepocreadiidae is polyphyletic. The Enenteridae (minus Cadenatella) and the Gyliauchenidae are jointly and individually monophyletic, and are sister groups. The nad1 gene on its own places a deep-sea lepocreadiine with the deep-sea lepidapedines, whereas lsrDNA, combined sequences and morphology place this deep-sea lepocreadiine within a group of typical lepocreadiids. It could not be demonstrated that a significant proportion of sites in the nad1 gene evolved under positive selection; this anomalous relationship therefore remains unexplained. Most deep-sea species are in a monophyletic group, a few of which also occur in shallow waters, retaining some characters of the deep-sea clade. Many lepocreadioid species infect herbivorous fish, and it may be that the recently discovered life-cycle involving a bivalve first intermediate host and metacercariae encysted on vegetation is a common life-cycle pattern. The host relationships show no indication of co-speciation, although the host-spectrums exhibited are not random, with related worms tending to utilize related hosts. There are, however, many exceptions. Morphology is found to be of limited value in indicating higher level relationships. For example, even with the benefit of hindsight the gyliauchenids show little morphological similarity to their sister group, the Enenteridae.
In total, 404 fishes of 34 species were examined and 678 digenean specimens found. Apart from data on Macrourus whitsoni previously published, 40 specimens of teleost fishes belonging to 14 species and six families were infected with Hemiuroidea; 91 specimens belonging to seven species and four families were collected. Metacercariae of Otodistomum cestoides (Beneden, 1871) (family Azygiidae) occurred in cysts on the mesentery. The remaining species, Genolinea bowersi (Leiper et Atkinson, 1914) and Aphanurus sp. (Bunocotylidae); Derogenes johnstoni Prudhoe et Bray, 1973 and Gonocerca phycidis Manter, 1925 (Derogenidae); Elytrophalloides oatesi (Leiper et Atkinson, 1914) and Glomericirrus macrouri (Gaevskaya, 1975) (Hemiuridae), occurred as adults in the alimentary tract. A single specimen of Aphanurus sp. probably belongs to a new species, but is a little distorted and lacks eggs. The other species were found in 17 new hosts. O. cestoides, G. bowersi and D. johnstoni were found in the Weddell Sea for the first time. G. macrouri occurred mainly in fishes living in deep waters (below 300 m), whereas E. oatesi (rare in the investigated area) mainly in shallower waters.
In total, 400 teleosts of 32 species (7 families) were examined. Cercoids of Tetraphyllidea (about 41 thousands) occurred in 204 host specimens of 26 species. Three morphological forms of cercoids were recognized. They were cercoids with bothridia divided into two and three loculi, and cercoids with subcylindrical bothridia. All forms were found in fishes from the Weddell Sea for the first time. Cercoids with bilocular bothridia were the most abundant form (90.7% of all specimens); cercoids with trilocular bothridia and cercoids with subcylindrical bothridia were less numerous (6.6 and 2.7% of all specimens, respectively). Cercoids concentrated in obligatory or facultative predators, whereas pelagic and bentho-pelagic fishes feeding on crill, were rarely infected. Chionodraco hamatus was the most heavily infected - prevalence 100%, relative density 903.
A new anisakid nematode, Hysterothylacium japonicum sp. n. is described from a single female specimen collected from the stomach of the rare marine fish, Trachipterus ishikawai Jordan et Snyder, from the Sea of Japan (Toyama Bay). It is characterized mainly by the presence of broad cervical alae, shape and structure of lips, length of the caecum and ventricular appendix (11.43 and 6.35 mm, respectively) and their ratio (1:0.55), long and slender tail, and by unusually large body measurements (body length 181 mm). H. japonicum is the first species of adult ascaridoid nematodes reported from fishes of the order Lampridiformes.
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