Gerhard P. de Jager
Acta Protozoologica, Volume 58, Issue 3, 2019, pp. 141-153
https://doi.org/10.4467/16890027AP.19.014.11915Mobiline taxonomic data is mostly inferred from populations collected in and on hosts associated with aquaculture. Even though these conditions may be conducive for studies relating to the hosts, accurate taxonomic inferences of the symbionts will be problematic. The site for the present study was the Okavango Panhandle region in Northern Botswana, an isolated, natural area with minimal anthropogenic influences. Morphometric and molecular evidence revealed that anuran tadpole trichodinids, up to now reported as Trichodina heterodentata Duncan 1977 and T. hypsilepis Wellborn 1967 from multiple host types, are in fact a new, more host specific species. This study includes comprehensive denticle descriptions of both the anuran hosted trichodinid and the morphologically similar T. hypsilepis restricted to teleost hosts (previously T. heterodentata).
Gerhard P. de Jager
Acta Protozoologica, Volume 58, Issue 3, 2019, pp. 125-139
https://doi.org/10.4467/16890027AP.19.013.11914Trichodina heterodentata was first described from fish breeding farms in the Philippines by Bryan Duncan in 1977 as ectoparasites of imported cichlids, more specifically the southern African Oreochromis mossambicus (Peters, 1852) from the Limpopo River System. This trichodinid has subsequently been described from almost every continent, bar North America. Being a cosmopolitan species, with a preference for cichlid hosts, it has unambiguous morphological features, but with distinct variances between and within populations. After reviewing previous descriptions of North American trichodinids, analysing the morphological data (both generally published information along with the original type material from the Smithsonian Museum, Washington, U.S.A.) and investigating the distribution patterns of the southern African introduced O. mossambicus throughout the North American water systems, three of the four studied trichodinids (T. hypsilepis Wellborn, 1967, T. salmincola Wellborn, 1967 and T. vallata Wellborn, 1967) are proposed to represent the same species as T. heterodentata. According to nomenclature rules T. hypsilepis henceforth represents the valid taxon (synonyms: T. salmincola, T. vallata and T. heterodentata). This not only questions the validity of several trichodinid species, but also indicates the probability of an African alien introduction into North America.