On the Procercoid Protonephridial Systems of Three Diphyllobothrium Species (Cestoda, Pseudophyllidea) and Janicki's Cercomer Theory
- 1 December 1971
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Zoologica Scripta
- Vol. 1 (1) , 43-56
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1463-6409.1971.tb00712.x
Abstract
Because the types of hooks are so similar in the oncosphacra/procercoid ef cestodes and in several groups of monogenclic trcmatodes and because the exterior of a procercoid with the hooks in a cercomer is so suggestive of a monogenetic nematode, the development of the procercoids of three Diphyllobothrium species was studied. The intention was to determine whether or not the procercoid protonephridial system would have a developmental stage when its type is similar to, or identical with that type which characterizes the monogeneans. Such a conformity would greatly support the theory of a common origin of monogeneans and ceslodes. However, it has emerged that no similar developmental stage exists. The ontogeny revealed a thorough metamorphosis from a very simple primary protonephridial system (identical with that of the miracidium larva in digeneans) to a secondary system, which develops into the system of the adult tapeworm. This fact may be interpreted as an argument against the supposed inter‐relalionships between monogeneans and cestodes. However, the type of hooks and the procercoid cercomer still indicate common ancestors. An analysis of the miracidium, the oncosphaera and the oncomiracidium (the monogenean larva) with reference to their different developmental stages when hatching, gave rise to my interpretation of the fundamental structure of both the miracidium and the oncosphaera as primitively simple and not reduced, Especially the identical type of protonephridial system indicates. in my view, that digeneans and ceslodes originally had a common larva type. If the ceslodes and the monogeneans have common ancestors, then the procercoid may be interpreted as the ontogenetic recapitulation of a common hook‐armed ancestor, here named hexucanthoid. This rhabdocoelan creature with six hooks in the cercomer and adapted to an ectocommensalic/ectoparasitic mode of life, is thought to have given rise to the monogeneans, the gyrocotylideans, the amphilinideans and the cestodes. The monogeneans were found to have two fundamentally different types of marginal hooks, and on this basis ihe existence of two different lines of evolution in Monogenea is indicated.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Larvae and Larval Development of MonogeneansPublished by Elsevier ,2008
- Additional Haptoral Hooks in the Genus DactylogyrusJournal of Parasitology, 1963
- Studies on the Helminth Fauna of Alaska. XXXVIII. The Taxonomic Significance of Eggs and Coracidia of Some Diphyllobothriid CestodesJournal of Parasitology, 1960
- The Form of the Larval Hooks as a Means of Separating Species of DiphyllobothriumJournal of Helminthology, 1960
- The larvae of some monogenetic trematode parasites of Plymouth fishesJournal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 1957
- The adult and Diplostomulum stage (Diplostomulum phoxini (Faust)) of Diplostomum pelmatoides Dubois and an experimental demonstration of part of the life cycleParasitology, 1955
- Studies on the Biology of Some Tapeworms of the GenusTeaniaPathogens and Global Health, 1954
- Über die Entwicklung und Anatomie von Diphyllobothrium dendriticum Nitzsch 1824Zeitschrift Fur Parasitenkunde-Parasitology Research, 1953
- Les stades larvaires de Triaenophorus nodulosus (Pall.). I. Le CoracidiumAnnales de Parasitologie Humaine et Comparée, 1933
- Studien über die Entwicklung von DiphyllobothriumZeitschrift Fur Parasitenkunde-Parasitology Research, 1930