Rhamnocercoides

Rhamnocercoides is a genus of monopisthocotylean monogeneans, belonging to the family Diplectanidae.[1][2] All species of Rhamnocercoides are parasites of marine perciform fishes of the family Sciaenidae.

Rhamnocercoides
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Rhamnocercoides

Luque & Iannacone, 1991
Species

See text.

Etymology

The generic name is based "in the morphological similarity with the genus Rhamnocercus".[1]

Species

According to the World Register of Marine Species,[2] two species are included in the genus:

  • Rhamnocercoides dominguesi Chero, Cruces, Sáez, Iannacone & Luque, 2017 [3]
  • Rhamnocercoides menticirrhi Luque & Iannacone, 1991 [1]
gollark: My mental architecture is immune to memetic kill agents anyway.
gollark: We should clearly devise a better digital protocol.
gollark: Computers can just directly feed PCM to speakers.
gollark: Yes, newer CC:T versions take a different approach to Computronics.
gollark: Oh, go consume an elliptic curve.

References

  1. Luque, J.L. & Iannacone, J. (1991) Rhamnocercidae (Monogenea: Dactylogyroidea) in Sciaenidae fishes from Perú, with description of Rhamnocercoides menticirrhi n. gen., n. sp. and two new species of Rhamnocercus. Revista de Biología Tropical, 39, 193–201. PDF
  2. WoRMS (2018). Rhamnocercoides Luque & Iannacone, 1991. Accessed at: http://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=517980 on 2018-12-26
  3. Chero, Jhon D.; Cruces, Celso L.; Sáez, Gloria; Iannacone, José; Luque, José L. (2017). "Diplectanids (Monogenea) parasitic on sciaenid fish from Peru with the proposal of Pseudorhamnocercoides n. gen., the description of Rhamnocercus dominguesi n. sp. and the redescription of Rhamnocercoides menticirrhi Luque and Iannacone, 1991". Acta Parasitologica. 62 (3): 541–548. doi:10.1515/ap-2017-0065. ISSN 1896-1851. PMID 28682761.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.