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Apororhynchus

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Apororhynchus
Drawing of Apororhynchus hemignathi by Arthur Shipley in 1896. This is the original sketch of the first species in the genus Apororhynchus to be described.
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Acanthocephala
Class: Archiacanthocephala
Order: Apororhynchida
Thapar, 1927[2]
Family: Apororhynchidae
Shipley, 1899[1]
Genus: Apororhynchus
Shipley, 1899
Type species
Apororhynchus hemignathi
(Shipley, 1896)
Other species
  • Apororhynchus aculeatus
  • Apororhynchus amphistomi
  • Apororhynchus chauhani
  • Apororhynchus paulonucleatus
  • Apororhynchus silesiacus

Apororhynchus is a genus of small parasitic spiny-headed (or thorny-headed) worms. It is the only genus in the family Apororhynchidae, which in turn is the only member of the order Apororhynchida.[3] A lack of features commonly found in the phylum Acanthocephala (primarily musculature) suggests an evolutionary branching from the other three orders of class Archiacanthocephala; however no genetic analysis has been completed to determine the evolutionary relationship between species. The distinguishing features of this order among archiacanthocephalans is a highly enlarged proboscis which contain small hooks. The musculature around the proboscis (the proboscis receptacle and receptacle protrusor) is also structured differently in this order. This genus contains six species that are distributed globally, being collected sporadically in Hawaii, Europe, North America, South America, and Asia. These worms exclusively parasitize birds by attaching themselves around the cloaca using their hook-covered proboscis. The bird hosts are of different orders, including owls, waders, and passerines. Infestation by an Apororhynchus species may cause enteritis and anemia.

Taxonomy

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The first species in this order to be described was Apororhynchus hemignathi which was originally named Arhynchus hemignathi by Arthur Shipley in 1896. The name Arhynchus[a] was chosen based on the characteristic absence of a proboscis in this species of Acanthocephala.[1] It was later renamed Apororhynchus (along with the family name Apororhynchidae) by Shipley in 1899 due to the name Arhynchus having been used by Dujean in 1834 for a beetle.[4]

The National Center for Biotechnology Information does not indicate that any phylogenetic analysis has been published on Apororhynchida that would confirm its position as a unique order in the class Archiacanthocephala.[5] The lack of morphological features such as an absence of a muscle plate, a midventral longitudinal muscle, lateral receptacle flexors, and an apical sensory organ when compared to the other three orders of class Archiacanthocephala indicate it is an early offshoot (basal).[6]

Description

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The genus Apororhynchus consists of ectoparasitic worms that attach themselves beneath the skin and around the anus of birds.[7][6] The distinguishing features of this order among acanthocephalans are a highly enlarged proboscis with limited motility and a reduced size of the hooks (or spines).[6] Apororhynchus species have short conical trunks and a reduced or absent neck.[8] The proboscis is large and globular with numerous deeply set spirally arranged rootless hooks usually not reaching the surface, or with no hooks.[8] They contain sets of muscles that are common to all Acanthocephala including a proboscis receptacle, a receptacle-surrounding muscle called a receptacle protrusor, retinacula (connective tissue that stabilizes tendons), a neck retractor, proboscis and receptacle retractors,[8] circular and longitudinal musculature under the metasomal (trunk) tegument, and a single muscular layer beneath the proboscis wall.[6]

Two regions of musculature are considerably different in Apororhynchus compared to the other acanthocephalan orders: the proboscis receptacle and receptacle protrusor are both reorganized in Apororhynchus with the muscles subdivided into strands extending from the cerebral ganglion, or nerve bundle, to the proboscis wall. These two muscles suspend the cerebral ganglion but are not involved in the eversion of the proboscis.[6] Additional anatomical features that can be used to distinguish this genus among other acanthocephalans include a cerebral ganglion located under the anterior wall of the proboscis, long and tubular lemnisci (bundles of sensory nerve fibers) that run along a central canal, the lack of any protonephridia (an organ which functions as a kidney), and the presence of eight pear-shaped cement glands used to temporarily close the posterior end of the female after copulation.[9][10]

Species

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Map of the world showing the distribution of species in the Apororhynchus genus
A. aculeatus
A. aculeatus
A. amphistomi
A. amphistomi
Apororhynchus
A. chauhani
A. chauhani
A. hemignathi
A. hemignathi
A. paulonucleatus
A. paulonucleatus
A. silesiacus
A. silesiacus
Apororhynchus
Apororhynchus
Worldwide distribution of Apororhynchus samples collected in the field

There are six species in the genus Apororhynchus.[11][12] A seventh species, Apororhynchus bivolucrus Das, 1950[13][14] (also called A. bivolucrus) from an Egyptian vulture (Neophron percnopterus) from India was considered to be a strigeid trematode by Yamaguti (1963).[15]

  • Apororhynchus aculeatus Meyer, 1931[16]

A. aculeatus has been found in Santos, Brazil, parasitizing a New World oriole.[17] The parasite was discovered in 1931, in the Berlin Museum, taken from the digestive tube of a bird named at that time as "Oriolus cristatus", which was likely a crested oropendola (Psarocolius decumanus).[b] A. aculeatus was the second parasite to be discovered in its genus, and the specimen used to describe the species was female.[17] Numerous fine hooks on the bulb-shaped proboscis, as well as the different host and location, distinguish it from A. hemignathi.[17]

  • Apororhynchus amphistomi Byrd and Denton, 1949[17][22]

The parasite was discovered in the summer of 1947 infesting a Canada warbler (Cardellina canadensis formerly Wilsonia canadensis) in Mountain Lake, Virginia, and a Northern parula (Setophaga americana formerly Compsothlyphis americana) in Augusta, Georgia, thus making it the third species in its genus to be discovered, and the first species in its genus to be discovered in North America.[17] It was found in the digestive tract, just inside the vent. The species name amphistomi derives from a superficial resemblance to the amphistomate trematodes (flukes with stoma on opposite sides).[17] On the proboscis, there are approximately 20 very fine hooks found on each of 40 rows. The two lemnisci are longer than the body length and are folded in the body cavity. Females are 2.13 mm long by 0.83 mm in maximum width and the proboscis is 0.36 mm long by 0.44 mm in maximum width. The male is smaller being 1.43 mm long by 0.53 mm in maximum width and the proboscis is 0.44 mm long by 0.74 mm in maximum width.[17]

  • Apororhynchus chauhani Sen, 1975[23]

A. chauhani is the only Apororhynchus species described from India. It was discovered in Srishailam, Andhra Pradesh, in 1975.[23] A. chauhani was named after Birendra Singh Chauhan, a member of the Zoological Society of India.[23][24] It parasitizes the spotted owlet (Athene brama) and has been found in the intestine. The body is 4.70 mm by 1.70 mm long with a proboscis that is 1.11 mm by 1.68 mm in length and immature eggs are around 0.015 mm to 0.035 mm in diameter. The hooks on the proboscis are finger shaped and numerous, especially in the posterior. The rest of the hooks on the anterior side are irregularly directed and sparse. The proboscis sheath is absent. The nerve ganglion is large and located near the anterior proboscis. The lemnisci are very long and unequal.[15]

A. hemignathi was the first species of Apororhynchus to be described with the creation of the genus and family by Arthur Shipley in 1896 due to its uniqueness among already described Acanthocephala.[17] It has been found in Kaua'i, Hawaii, parasitizing the now extinct Kauaʻi ʻakialoa (Akialoa stejnegeri).[17] A. hemignathi was named after the genus of the Kauaʻi ʻakialoa, which was Hemignathus at the time of the description. Specimens range from 2.5 mm to 3.5 mm long, distended 1 mm to 1.5 mm longer.[4] It has two to four nuclei in the lemnisci.[25] It is the type species for the genus.[11]

  • Apororhynchus paulonucleatus Khokhlova and Cimbaluk, 1966[11]

This parasite has been found in the black-winged pratincole (Glareola nordmanni) at Malye Chany Lake, in Russia,[26] and in the colon and cloaca of the Eastern yellow wagtail (Motacilla tschutschensis) in Chukotka and Kamchatka (including the Karaginsky Island), also in Russia.[25] It was described in 1966.[25][11] The proboscis is large compared to the body and spherical. It is armed with 10–12 spiral rows of hooks with 14–15 hooks in each row. The hook has a thin blade with a curved tip and root thickened with broadened base. In the body, there are 10–16 giant nuclei with a diameter of 0.050–0.077 mm. There is a very short neck (0.153 mm long) between the proboscis and the body with attached ribbon-like lemnisci longer than their own body length. Females are 3.7 mm long by 0.92 mm in maximum width and the proboscis is 1.30 mm long by 1.53 mm in maximum width. The male is smaller being 3.21 mm long by 0.766 mm in maximum width and the proboscis is 0.796 mm long by 0.995 mm in maximum width. The eggs were oval shaped with three concentric shells around 0.074–0.080 mm long and 0.040–0.043 mm wide.[25]

  • Apororhynchus silesiacus Okulewicz and Maruszewski, 1980[27]

A. silesiacus was found in the cloaca of the European robin (Erithacus rubecula), the thrush nightingale (Luscinia luscinia) and the common nightingale (Luscinia megarhynchos) in Wroclaw, Poland,[27] and of the European robin in Alsóperepuszta, Hungary.[28] Described in 1980, it is the most recently classified species of the Apororhynchus. A. silesiacus is named after Silesia, a region in Poland where the parasite was found.[27] Specimens were between 3.21 and 3.51 mm in total length, with a maximum width of 0.80 to 1.05 mm at middle and the eggs were around 0.07 mm long and 0.035 mm wide.[28] It has a proboscis wider than the anterior part of the trunk, with about 40 spiral rows of hooks, each row bearing 14 to 16 hooks. There are 28 to 31 giant nuclei in the body wall and 9 to 12 in the lemnisci. The testes are almost parallel. The parasite has been found infesting juvenile European robins, indicating that the infestation occurred in the nesting area.[27]

Hosts

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Diagram of the life cycle of Acanthocephala
Life cycle of Acanthocephala.[29][d]

The life cycle of an acanthocephalan consists of three stages beginning when an infective acanthor (development of an egg) is released from the intestines of the definitive host and then ingested by an arthropod, the intermediate host. The intermediate hosts of Apororhynchus are not known. When the acanthor molts, the second stage called the acanthella begins. This stage involves penetrating the wall of the mesenteron or the intestine of the intermediate host and growing. The final stage is the infective cystacanth which is the larval or juvenile state of an Acanthocephalan, differing from the adult only in size and stage of sexual development. The cystacanths within the intermediate hosts are consumed by the definitive host, usually attaching to the walls of the intestines, and as adults they reproduce sexually in the intestines. The acanthor are passed in the feces of the definitive host and the cycle repeats. There are no known paratenic hosts (hosts where parasites infest but do not undergo larval development or sexual reproduction) for Apororhynchus.[31]

Apororhynchus species exclusively parasitize avian hosts of different orders including owls, waders, and passerines.[7] The parasite attaches to the cloaca and in some cases the intestinal wall using a hook-covered proboscis.[6][10] Infestation can cause enteritis and anemia in Hawaiian honeycreepers.[32] There are no reported cases of any Apororhynchus species infesting humans in the English language medical literature.[30]

Notes

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  1. ^ The name derives from the Ancient Greek word rhúnkhos, which means snout, nose, or beak.
  2. ^ Oriolus cristatus is synonymous with Cacicus cristatus.[18] Wood 1889[19] calls Cacicus cristatus the crested cassique. Lydekker 1895[20] names the same bird Ostinops decumanus, now the crested oropendola or Psarocolius decumanus. The name Oriolus cristatus was also given by Pennant to a bird in Madras, India in Forster's 1781 list of Indian birds.[21]
  3. ^ A binomial authority in parentheses indicates that the species was originally described in a genus other than Apororhynchus. Apororhynchus hemignathi was originally named Arhynchus hemignathi by Arthur Shipley in 1896 and renamed (also by Shipley) in 1899. It is synonymous with Neorhynchus hemignathi (Shipley, 1896) de Marval, 1905.[11]
  4. ^ There are no known aberrant human infections for Apororhynchus species.[30]

References

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  1. ^ a b Shipley, Arthur E. (1897). "Memoirs: On Arhynchus hemignathi, a new Genus of Acanthocephala" (PDF). Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science. s2-39 (1896–1897): 207–218. OCLC 83796449. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 November 2012. Retrieved 9 September 2010.
  2. ^ Thapar, Gobind Singh (1927). "On Acanthogyrus n.g. from the Intestine of the Indian Fish Labeo rohita, with a Note on the Classification of the Acanthocephala". Journal of Helminthology. 5 (2): 109–120. doi:10.1017/S0022149X00018678.
  3. ^ "Subject Index". The Journal of Parasitology. 45: 162–286. 1959. ISSN 0022-3395. JSTOR 3274895.
  4. ^ a b c Shipley, Arthur E. (1899). "Arhynchus hemignathi" (PDF). Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science. New Series. 42 (167): 361. doi:10.1242/jcs.s2-42.167.361. Archived (PDF) from the original on 4 June 2015. Retrieved 9 September 2010.
  5. ^ Schoch, Conrad L; Ciufo, Stacy; Domrachev, Mikhail; Hotton, Carol L; Kannan, Sivakumar; Khovanskaya, Rogneda; Leipe, Detlef; Mcveigh, Richard; O’Neill, Kathleen; Robbertse, Barbara; Sharma, Shobha; Soussov, Vladimir; Sullivan, John P; Sun, Lu; Turner, Seán; Karsch-Mizrachi, Ilene (2020). "NCBI Taxonomy: a comprehensive update on curation, resources and tools". Database: The Journal of Biological Databases and Curation. doi:10.1093/database/baaa062. PMC 7408187. PMID 32761142. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Herlyn, H. (2017). "Organization and evolution of the proboscis musculature in avian parasites of the genus Apororhynchus (Acanthocephala: Apororhynchida)". Parasitology Research. 116 (7): 1801–1810. doi:10.1007/s00436-017-5440-z. PMID 28488043. S2CID 25875565.
  7. ^ a b Van Cleave, Harley J. (1923). "A key to the genera of Acanthocephala". Transactions of the American Microscopical Society. 42 (4): 184–191. doi:10.2307/3221591. JSTOR 3221591.
  8. ^ a b c Amin, O. M. (1987). "Key to the families and subfamilies of Acanthocephala, with the erection of a new class (Polyacanthocephala) and a new order (Polyacanthorhynchida)". Journal of Parasitology. 73 (6): 1216–1219. doi:10.2307/3282307. JSTOR 3282307. PMID 3437357.
  9. ^ Bush, Albert O.; Fernández, Jacqueline C.; Esch, Gerald W.; Seed, J. Richard (2001). Parasitism: the diversity and ecology of animal parasites. Cambridge, UK New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. p. 203. ISBN 0-521-66278-8. OCLC 44131774.
  10. ^ a b Kükenthal, W (2014). Gastrotricha and Gnathifera. Göttingen, Germany: Walter de Gruyter. p. 322. ISBN 978-3110274271.
  11. ^ a b c d e Amin, O. M. (2013). "Classification of the Acanthocephala" (PDF). Folia Parasitologica. 60 (4): 275. doi:10.14411/fp.2013.031. PMID 24261131. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 August 2017. Retrieved 27 September 2019.
  12. ^ "Apororhynchus Shipley, 1899". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. 1 September 2019. Retrieved 1 September 2019. "ITIS - Report: Apororhynchus". Archived from the original on 21 October 2013. Retrieved 25 November 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  13. ^ Das, Eashwar N. (1950). "On a new species of Apororhynchus from the white scavenger vulture Neophron percnopterus (Linn.) from India". Records of the Indian Museum. 48 (3–4): 43–50. OCLC 702318856.
  14. ^ Dunagan, T. T.; Miller, D. M. (2008). Acanthocephalan Bibliography. Carbondale, Illinois: Physiology Department, Southern Illinois University. p. 31.
  15. ^ a b Bhattacharya, S. B. (2007). Handbook on Indian Acanthocephala (PDF). Kolkata, Kinda: Director, Zool. Surv. India, Kolkata. pp. 14–15. OCLC 266991963. Archived (PDF) from the original on 23 March 2016. Retrieved 5 September 2019.
  16. ^ Meyer, A. (1931). "Neue Acanthocephalen aus dem Berliner Museum. Begründung eines neuen Acanthocephalensystems auf Grund einer Untersuchung der Berliner Sammlung". Zoologische Jahrbücher, Abteilung für Systematik, Ökologie und Geographie der Tiere (in German). 62: 65–68. OCLC 68471167.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i Byrd, Elon E.; Denton, J. Fred (1949). "The Helminth Parasites of Birds. II. A New Species of Acanthocephala from North American Birds". The Journal of Parasitology. 35 (4): 391–410. doi:10.2307/3273430. JSTOR 3273430. PMID 18133320.
  18. ^ Smedley, Edward; Rose, High James; Rose, Henry John, eds. (1845). Encyclopaedia Metropolitana; or, Universal Dictionary of Knowledge, On an Original Plan: Comprising the Twofold Advantage of a Philosophical and an Alphabetical Arrangement, with Appropriate Engravings Volume XVI. London: B. Fellows and others. p. 345. OCLC 4070837.
  19. ^ Wood, John George (1889). Homes Without Hands: Being a Description of the Habitations of Animals, Classed According to Their Principle of Construction. Harvard University: Harper & Brothers, 1866. p. 263. OCLC 975983274.
  20. ^ Lydekker, Richard (1895). The Royal Natural History Volume III Section VI. London and New York: Frederick Warne & Co. p. 357.
  21. ^ Forster, Johann Reinhold (1781). Indische Zoologie oder systematische Beschreibungen seltener und unbekannter Thiere aus Indien: mit 15 illuminirten Kupfertafeln erläutert; Nebst einer kurzen vorläufigen Abhandlung über den Umfang von Indien und die Beschaffenheit des Klima, des Bodens und des Meeres daselbst, und einem Anhange, darin ein kurzes Verzeichniß der Thiere in Indien mitgetheilt wird (in Latin). Halle: Gebauer. p. 40.
  22. ^ Byrd, Elon E. (1949). "Observations on the anatomy of a male Acanthocephalan". Journal of the Tennessee Academy of Science. 24 (3): 174.
  23. ^ a b c Sen, J. K. (1975). "On a new species of Apororhynchus Shipley, 1899 (Apororhynchoidea: Apororhynchidae) from India". In Tiwara, K. K.; Srivastava, C. B. (eds.). Dr. B. S. Chauhan Commemorative Volume. Orissa, India: Zoological Society of India. pp. 211–213.
  24. ^ "Zoological Society of India". Nature. 162 (4106): 60. 1948. Bibcode:1948Natur.162R..60.. doi:10.1038/162060b0.
  25. ^ a b c d Khokhlova, I. G.; Cimbaluk, A. K. (1971). "Acanthocephala of the genus Apororhynchus Shipley, 1899 and a description of A. paulonucleatus n.sp". KOLOS: 426–431.
  26. ^ Peresad'ko, L. V. (1980). "Nematoda and Acanthocephala of Charadriiformes, new for West Siberia". Sistematika I Ekologiya Zhivotnykh Novye i Maloizvestnye Vidy Fauny Sibiri (in Russian): 10–23.
  27. ^ a b c d Okulewicz, Jerzy; Maruszewski, Władysław (1980). "Apororhynchus silesiacus sp. n. (Apororhynchidae, Acanthocephala) – a parasite of passerine birds (Passeriformes)". Acta Parasitologica Polonica. 27 (46/60): 459–470.
  28. ^ a b Dimitrova, Z. M.; Murai, Éva; Georgiev, Boyko B. (1995). "The first record in Hungary of Apororhynchus silesiacus Okulewicz and Maruszewski, 1980 (Acanthocephala), with new data on its morphology". Parasitologia Hungarica. 28: 83–88. S2CID 82191853.
  29. ^ CDC’s Division of Parasitic Diseases and Malaria (11 April 2019). "Acanthocephaliasis". www.cdc.gov. Center for Disease Control. Retrieved 17 July 2023.
  30. ^ a b Mathison, BA; et al. (2021). "Human Acanthocephaliasis: a Thorn in the Side of Parasite Diagnostics". J Clin Microbiol. 59 (11): e02691-20. doi:10.1128/JCM.02691-20. PMC 8525584. PMID 34076470.
  31. ^ Schmidt, G.D. (1985). "Development and life cycles". In Crompton, D.W.T.; Nickol, B.B. (eds.). Biology of the Acanthocephala (PDF). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press. pp. 273–305.
  32. ^ "Summary of parasites and diseases known from Hawaiian honeycreepers (subfamily Drepanidinae). Adapted from van Riper and van Riper 1985". Birds of North America. The Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Archived from the original on 7 October 2019. Retrieved 6 October 2019.
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