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      Bucephalus damriyasai n. sp. (Digenea: Bucephalidae) from the blacktip trevally Caranx heberi (Bennett) (Perciformes: Carangidae) off Bali, Indonesia

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      Systematic Parasitology
      Springer Netherlands

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          Abstract

          The new species Bucephalus damriyasai n. sp. is described from Caranx heberi (Bennett) from off Bali, Indonesia. It can be distinguished from other Bucephalus spp. recorded from carangid hosts by its narrow elongate body shape and the relatively long distance between the rhynchus and the vitellarium, as well as other features distinguishing it from individual species. The most similar species are differentiated from B. damriyasai n. sp. as follows: B. carangis Yamaguti, 1970 has a much greater length, the rhynchus is smaller and the cirrus-sac is small, not always reaching to the posterior testis; B. fragilis Velasquez, 1959 is a tiny species, the pre-vitelline distance is short and the caecum is saccular; B. gorgon (Linton, 1905) is much longer and relatively broader, the uterus reaches distinctly anterior to the vitellarium and the rhyncheal tentacles appear more complex; B. labracis Paggi & Orecchia, 1965 is distinctly longer, slightly broader, with a slightly larger rhynchus, and has shorter pre-uterine and pre-mouth distances; B. paraheterotentaculatus Velasquez, 1959 is much longer, relatively rather broad, the rhynchus is said to bear 21 tentacles, the post-testicular region and cirrus-sac reach are longer and the caecum is described as saccular; B. sphyraenae Yamaguti, 1952 is longer, slightly broader, the uterus reaches anteriorly to the vitellarium and the caecum is claviform and oriented anteriorly; B. margaritae Ozaki & Ishibashi, 1934 (syn. B. varicus Manter, 1940) is relatively squat, has shorter pre-vitelline and pre-mouth distances and a longer post-testicular distance and cirrus-sac reach; B. yamagutii Gupta & Singh, 1985 is broader, with a relatively short pre-vitelline distance, the caecum extends anteriorly to the pharynx, but not posteriorly and the rhynchus is said to carry five tentacles. The distinctive features of B. damriyasai n. sp. are compared with those of all other marine Bucephalus spp. in a table. The number of bucephalid trematodes known from Indonesian waters is now 13, two of them await further identification. They have been described from the fish families Carangidae, Platycephalidae, Sciaenidae, Serranidae and Sphyraenidae.

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          Amendment of Articles 8, 9, 10, 21 and 78 of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature to expand and refine methods of publication

          (2012)
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            Gut wash, body soak, blender and heat-fixation: approaches to the effective collection, fixation and preservation of trematodes of fishes.

            T Cribb, R Bray (2010)
            Advice is offered on some effective methods for collecting and preserving trematodes from fishes for taxonomy and systematics. Emphasis is placed on obtaining high-quality specimens that have reliable data and that are amenable to study by both morphological and molecular approaches. We emphasise the importance of the freshness of the host specimen, the reliability of its provenance and the labelling of the specimens. For the collecting itself, we recommend a 'gut-wash' approach for gastro-intestinal species and specific searches for atypical taxa such as didymozoids, aporocotylids, Saturnius Manter, 1969 and transversotrematids. For metacercariae, we recommend a 'blender' approach to release parasites from host tissues. For fixation, we argue in favour of heat-killing in fluid at close to boiling temperature. We recommend against flattening as a routine procedure for collecting specimens for morphology. Preservation for morphological study is best in formalin or alcohol, and alcohol works well for molecular samples. The importance of reliable labelling and the deposition of specimens in museums is emphasised.
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              Transmission of fish parasites into grouper mariculture (Serranidae: Epinephelus coioides (Hamilton, 1822)) in Lampung Bay, Indonesia.

              Differently fed groupers Epinephelus coioides from an Indonesian finfish mariculture farm were studied for ecto- and endohelminth parasites. Pellet-fed E. coioides were infested with 13 parasite species/taxa of which six had a monoxenous and seven a heteroxenous life cycle. A total of 14 parasite species/taxa were found in the fish that were fed with different trash fish species, four of them with a monoxenous and ten with a heteroxenous life cycle. The use of pellet food significantly reduced the transfer of endohelminths and the number of parasites with a heteroxenous life cycle. Out of ten studied trash fish species, 62 parasite species were isolated (39% ectoparasitic and 61% endoparasitic), four of them also occurring in the cultured E. coioides and 14 in different groupers from Balai Budidaya Laut Lampung. The trash fish is held responsible for the transmission of these parasites into the mariculture fish. Endohelminth infestation of pellet fed fish demonstrates that parasite transfer also occurs via organisms that naturally live in, on, and in the surroundings of the net cages. Seventeen recorded invertebrates from the net cages might play an important role as intermediate hosts and hence parasite transmitters. The risk of parasite transfer can be considerably reduced by feeding selected trash fish species with a lower parasite burden, using only trash fish musculature or minimizing the abundance of invertebrates (fouling) on the net cages. These methods can control the endoparasite burden of cultivated fish without medication. The control of ectoparasites requires more elaborate techniques. Once they have succeeded in entering a mariculture farm, it is almost impossible to eliminate them from the system.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                rab@nhm.ac.uk
                Journal
                Syst Parasitol
                Syst. Parasitol
                Systematic Parasitology
                Springer Netherlands (Dordrecht )
                0165-5752
                1573-5192
                21 November 2018
                21 November 2018
                2019
                : 96
                : 1
                : 65-78
                Affiliations
                [1 ]ISNI 0000 0001 2270 9879, GRID grid.35937.3b, Department of Life Sciences, , Natural History Museum, ; Cromwell Road, London, SW7 5BD UK
                [2 ]ISNI 0000000121858338, GRID grid.10493.3f, Faculty of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, Aquaculture and Sea-Ranching, , University of Rostock, ; Justus-von-Liebig-Weg 6, 18059 Rostock, Germany
                [3 ]ISNI 0000 0001 0692 6937, GRID grid.412828.5, Faculty of Veterinary Sciences, , Udayana University, ; Bukit Jimbaran, 80363 Badung, Bali Indonesia
                Article
                9828
                10.1007/s11230-018-9828-7
                6336760
                30465147
                d73656aa-b83e-4812-aede-9c5683ffdfd1
                © The Author(s) 2018

                Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.

                History
                : 13 July 2018
                : 28 October 2018
                Funding
                Funded by: German Federal Ministry for Education and Science
                Award ID: BMBF Grant No. 03F0641D
                Award Recipient :
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                © Springer Nature B.V. 2019

                Parasitology
                Parasitology

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