Cainocreadium

Cainocreadium is a genus of trematodes in the family Opecoelidae. It has been synonymised with Apopodocotyle Pritchard, 1966,[2] Cainocreadoides Nagaty, 1956,[3] and Emmettrema Caballero y Caballero, 1946.[4]

Cainocreadium
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Subfamily:
Hamacreadiinae
Genus:
Cainocreadium

Nicoll, 1909[1]

Species

  • Cainocreadium alanwilliamsi Bray, 1990[5]
  • Cainocreadium bolivari (Caballero y Caballero & Caballero Rodríguez, 1970) Martin, Cutmore, Ward & Cribb, 2017[6][7]
  • Cainocreadium consuetum (Linton, 1910) Yamaguti, 1971[8][9]
  • Cainocreadium dentecis Jousson & Bartoli, 2001[10]
  • Cainocreadium epinepheli (Yamaguti, 1934) [emend. Nagaty, 1956] Durio & Manter, 1968[11][3][12]
  • Cainocreadium flesi Korniychuk & Gaevskaya, 2000[13]
  • Cainocreadium gulella (Linton, 1910) Durio & Manter, 1968[8][12]
  • Cainocreadium labracis (Dujardin, 1845) Nicoll, 1909[14][1]
  • Cainocreadium lariosi (Caballero y Caballero, 1946) [emend. Yamaguti, 1953] Cribb, 2005[4][15][16]
  • Cainocreadium lintoni (Siddiqi & Cable, 1960) Durio & Manter, 1968[17][12]
  • Cainocreadium longisaccum (Siddiqi & Cable, 1960) Durio & Manter, 1968[17][12]
  • Cainocreadium musculometra (Bravo-Hollis & Manter, 1957) [emend. Pritchard, 1966] Martin, Cutmore, Ward & Cribb, 2017[18][2][7]
  • Cainocreadium oscitans (Linton, 1910) [emend. Pritchard, 1966] Cribb, 2005[8][2][16]
  • Cainocreadium pteroisi (Nagaty & Abdel-Aal, 1962) Durio & Manter, 1968[19][12]
  • Cainocreadium serrani (Nagaty, 1956) Manter, 1963[3][20]
  • Cainocreadium xishaense (Shen, 1985) Martin, Cutmore, Ward & Cribb, 2017[21][7]

References

  1. Nicoll, W. (1909). Studies on the structure and classification of the digenetic trematodes. Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science, New Series, 53(3), 391–487.
  2. Pritchard, M. H. (1966). A revision of the genus Podocotyle (Trematoda: Opecoelidae). Zoologische Jahrbucher, Abteilung für Systematik, 93, 158–172.
  3. Nagaty, H. F. (1956). Trematodes of fishes from the Red Sea. Part 7. On two gyliauchenids and three allocreadoids, including four new species. Journal of Parasitology, 42(5), 523–527.
  4. Caballero y Caballero, E. (1946). Un nuevo genero de trematodos de los peces marinos del Puerto de Salina Cruz, Oaxaca, Mexico. Anales del Instituto de Biologia Universidad de Mexico, 17(1–2), 167–174.
  5. Bray, R. A. (1990). Two new opecoelids (Digenea) in the flatfish Pseudorhombus jenynsi (Bleeker) from Shark Bay, Western Australia. Systematic Parasitology, 15(1), 33–40.
  6. Caballero y Caballero, E. & Caballero Rodríguez, G. (1970). Estudios de la colección de tremátodos colectados por Howard A. Winter en peces del Océano Pacífico de México y de los Estados Unidos de Norte América. III. Anales de la Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas, México, 18, 265–272.
  7. Martin, S., Cutmore, S., Ward, S. & Cribb, T. (2017). An updated concept and revised composition for Hamacreadium Linton, 1910 (Opecoelidae: Plagioporinae) clarifies a previously obscured pattern of host-specificity among species. Zootaxa, 4254(2), 151–187.
  8. Linton, E. (1910). Helminth fauna of the dry Tortugas. II. Trematodes. Papers from the Tortugas Laboratory of the Carnegie Institute of Washington, 4, 11–98.
  9. Yamaguti, S. (1971). Synopsis of digenetic trematodes of vertebrates. Tokyo: Keigaku Publishing Co.
  10. Jousson, O. & Bartoli, P. (2001). Molecules, morphology and morphometrics of Cainocreadium labracis and Cainocreadium dentecis n. sp. (Digenea: Opecoelidae) parasitic in marine fishes. International Journal for Parasitology, 31(7), 706–714.
  11. Yamaguti, S. (1934). Studies on the helminth fauna of Japan. Part 2. Trematodes of fishes. I. Japanese Journal of Zoology, 5, 249–541.
  12. Durio, W. O. & Manter, H. W. (1968). Some digenetic trematodes of marine fishes of New Caledonia. Part II. Opecoelidae and Lepocreadiidae. The Journal of Parasitology, 54(4), 747.
  13. Korniychuk, J. & Gaevskaya, A. (2000). Cainocreadium flesi sp. n. (Trematoda, Opecoelidae) — new trematode species from the Black Sea fishes. Vestnik Zoologii, 34, 89–91.
  14. Dujardin, F. (1845). Histoire naturelle des helminthes ou vers intestinaux. Paris: Librairie Encyclopedique de Roret.
  15. Yamaguti, S. (1953). Parasitic worms mainly from Celebes. Part 2. Monogenetic trematodes of fishes. Acta Medicinae Okayama, 8, 203–256.
  16. Cribb, T. H. (2005). Family Opecoelidae Ozaki, 1925. In: Bray, R., Gibson, D. & Jones, A. (Eds.), Keys to the Trematoda. Volume 2 (pp. 443–531). London: CABI Publishing and The Natural History Museum.
  17. Siddiqi, A. H. & Cable, R. M. (1960). Digenetic trematodes of marine fishes of Puerto Rico. Scientific Survey of Porto Rico and the Virgin Islands, 17(3), 257–369.
  18. Bravo-Hollis, M. & Manter, H. (1957). Trematodes of marine fishes of Mexican waters. X. Thirteen Digenea including nine new species and two new genera from Pacific coast. Proceedings of the Helminthological Society of Washington, 24(1), 35–48.
  19. Nagaty, H. F. & Abdel-Aal, T. M. (1962). Trematodes of fishes from the Red Sea. Part 15. Four new species of Hamacreadium, family Allocreadiidae. The Journal of Parasitology, 48(3), 384–386.
  20. Manter, H. W. (1963). Studies on digenetic trematodes of fishes of Fiji. II. Families Lepocreadiidae, Opistholebetidae, and Opecoelidae. Journal of Parasitology, 49, 99–113.
  21. Shen, J. (1985). Digenetic trematodes of fishes from the Xisha Islands, II. Studia Marina Sinica, 24, 167–180.
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