Pseudoheterolebes
Pseudoheterolebes is a genus of trematodes in the family Opecoelidae. After having been originally described, it was largely ignored by other scientists due to the originally vague definition of the genus; Martin et al., 2018[2] resurrected the genus to resolve a dispute among the existing definitions of Opistholebes and Maculifer, which were also described by earlier reports of Yamaguti.
Pseudoheterolebes | |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | |
Phylum: | |
Class: | |
Order: | |
Family: | |
Subfamily: | Opistholebetinae |
Genus: | Pseudoheterolebes Yamaguti, 1959[1] |
Species
- Pseudoheterolebes adcotylophorus (Manter, 1947) Martin, Ribu, Cutmore & Cribb, 2018[3][2]
- Pseudoheterolebes corazonae Martin, Ribu, Cutmore & Cribb, 2018[2]
- Pseudoheterolebes cotylophorus (Ozaki, 1935) Yamaguti, 1959[4][1]
- Pseudoheterolebes diodontis (Cable, 1956) Martin, Ribu, Cutmore & Cribb, 2018[5][2]
- Pseudoheterolebes stellaglobulus Martin, Ribu, Cutmore & Cribb, 2018[2]
gollark: Wrong.
gollark: It's unethical.
gollark: Why would you use Java? Just don't.
gollark: `DROP DATABASE`, actually.
gollark: Delete them.
References
- Yamaguti, S. (1959). Studies on the helminth fauna of Japan. Part 54. Trematodes of fishes, XII. Publications of the Seto Marine Biological Laboratory, 7(2), 241–262.
- Martin, S., Ribu, D., Cutmore, S. C. & Cribb, T. H. (2018). Opistholobetines (Digenea: Opecoelidae) in Australian tetraodontiform fishes. Systematic Parasitology, 95, 743–781.
- Manter, H. W. (1947). The digenetic trematodes of marine fishes of Tortugas, Florida. American Midland Naturalist, 38, 257–416.
- Ozaki, Y. (1935). Two new trematodes of the family Opistholebetidae Travassos. Proceedings of the Imperial Academy of Tokyo, 11, 244–246.
- Cable, R. M. (1956). Opistholebes diodontis n. sp., its development in the final host, the affinities of some aphistomatous trematodes from marine fishes and the allocreadioid problem. Parasitology, 46, 1–13.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.