An undescribed Cryptaphelenchus species was isolated from a bark beetle, Cryphalus piceae that had emerged from a dead log of the Veitch’s fir, Abies veitchii, collected from Sugadaira Montane Research… Click to show full abstract
An undescribed Cryptaphelenchus species was isolated from a bark beetle, Cryphalus piceae that had emerged from a dead log of the Veitch’s fir, Abies veitchii, collected from Sugadaira Montane Research Center, University of Tsukuba, Nagano, Japan. The new species is characterised by its female post-vulval uterine sac (PUS) of less than one vulval body diam. in length and female posterior body end (tail) conical with elongate posterior part and variably shaped tip, seven male genital papillae, which are composed/arranged as a precloacal P1, P2 pair slightly anterior to cloacal opening, and two small pairs of glandpapillae near tail tip and very narrow bursal flap-like cuticular extension surrounding the male tail. In addition to these characters, the male apophysis appears wing-like in ventral view. In possessing an elongate posterior part, Cryptaphelenchus abietis n. sp. shares the female tail shape with C. borlossi, C. leptocaudus and C. sutoricus, and shares a short PUS with C. iranicus, C. varicaudatus, C. baujardi and C. paravaricaudatus. However, the new species can be distinguished from these species by other typological and morphometric characters and its molecular phylogenetic status. Phylogenetically, the new species is closest to Bursaphelenchus minutus, but can be clearly distinguished by morphological and molecular sequence characters.
               
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