Trilobovarium

Trilobovarium is a genus of trematodes in the family Opecoelidae.

Trilobovarium
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Subfamily:
Plagioporinae
Genus:
Trilobovarium

Martin, Cutmore & Cribb, 2017[1]

Species

  • Trilobovarium diacopae (Nagaty & Abdel Aal, 1962) Martin, Cutmore & Cribb, 2017[2][1]
  • Trilobovarium ira (Yamaguti, 1940) Martin, Cutmore & Cribb, 2017[3][1]
  • Trilobovarium khalili (Ramadan, 1983) Martin, Cutmore & Cribb, 2017[4][1]
  • Trilobovarium krusadaiense (Gupta, 1956) Martin, Cutmore & Cribb, 2017[5][1]
  • Trilobovarium lineatum (Aken'Ova & Cribb, 2001) Martin, Cutmore & Cribb, 2017[6][1]
  • Trilobovarium moretonense (Aken'Ova & Cribb, 2001) Martin, Cutmore & Cribb, 2017[6][1]
  • Trilobovarium palauense (Machida, 2004) Martin, Cutmore & Cribb, 2017[7][1]
  • Trilobovarium parvvatis Martin, Cutmore & Cribb, 2017[1]
  • Trilobovarium truncatum (Linton, 1940) Martin, Cutmore & Cribb, 2017[8][1]
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gollark: Anyway, basically: WHY takes some C code, and sticks it in the main function, and then adds a busy loop to waste CPU time.
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gollark: ```WHY was created to illustrate to somebody that compiled languages are not necessarily faster.Compiling WHY involves reading the WHY source file and then placing it in a C source file at the end of the `main` function after a busy loop.Here is a Python implementation; it requires GCC to be installed. It supports different "optimization" levels. ```Quoted from the Wiki.
gollark: ESOBOT!

References

  1. Martin, S. B., Cutmore, S. C., & Cribb, T. H. (2017). Revision of Neolebouria Gibson, 1976 (Digenea: Opecoelidae), with Trilobovarium n. g., for species infecting tropical and subtropical shallow-water fishes. Systematic Parasitology, 94(3), 307–338.
  2. Nagaty, H. F. & Abdel-Aal, T. M. (1962). Trematodes of fishes from the Red Sea. Part 15. Four new species of Hamacreadium (Allocreadiidae). Journal of Parasitology, 48, 384–386.
  3. Yamaguti, S. (1940). Studies on the helminth fauna of Japan. Part 31. Trematodes of fishes, VII. Japanese Journal of Zoology, 9, 35–108.
  4. Ramadan, M. M. (1983). A review of the trematode genus Hamacreadium Linton, 1910 (Opecoelidae), with descriptions of two new species from the Red Sea fishes. Japanese Journal of Parasitology, 32, 531–539.
  5. Gupta, N. (1956). Studies on the digenetic trematodes of marine fishes from the Gulf of Manaar, India. Research Bulletin of the Punjab University, Science, 89, 61–83.
  6. Aken'Ova, T. O. & Cribb, T. H. (2001). Two new species of Neolebouria Gibson, 1976 (Digenea: Opecoelidae) from temperate marine fishes of Australia. Systematic Parasitology, 49, 65–71.
  7. Machida, M. (2004). Four new species of digenean trematodes from wrasses of southern Japan and neighboring waters. Bulletin of the National Science Museum, Tokyo, Science, 30, 105–111.
  8. Linton, E. (1940). Trematodes from fishes mainly from the Woods Hole region, Massachusetts. Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 88, 1–172.


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