Diplogasteridae

Summary

Diplogastridae, formerly Diplogasteridae, are a family of nematodes (roundworms) known from a wide range of habitats, often in commensal or parasitic associations with insects.[1]

Diplogasteridae
Temporal range: Burdigalian–present
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Nematoda
Class: Chromadorea
Order: Rhabditida
Infraorder: Diplogasteromorpha
Superfamily: Diplogasteroidea
Family: Diplogasteridae
Micoletzky 1922
Genera

See text

Synonyms

Description edit

Diplogastrid nematodes are characterized by a distinct "two-lobed" pharynx (hence their name from the Greek διπλόος = "double" and γαστήρ = "stomach"), the second (posterior) lobe being composed mostly of glandular tissue. Most known species also have at least one tooth, which has presumably allowed them to access many new food sources compared with the related nematodes of Rhabditidae (including Caenorhabditis elegans), most species of which feed on bacteria. Several diplogastrid species also have a polyphenism in their mouthparts, allowing resource specialization within species. The wide array of feeding modes in the Diplogastridae is reflected by the relatively high diversity and complexity of their mouth structures, which show accelerated rates of evolution in comparison with the Rhabditidae.[2]

While Sudhaus and Lieven[3] sunk many generic names in their lumping approach of a revision, the Hungarian nematologist Istvan Andrassy was a "splitter", erecting and re-erecting many nematode taxa.[4] The truth might be somewhere in between, as the approaches by Ragsdale and others have shown in recent years.[5]

Among the Diplogastridae is the nematode Pristionchus pacificus, a model organism for comparative developmental biology.

 
Formicodiplogaster myrmenema dauer juvenile in Dominican amber

Genera edit

References edit

  1. ^ Sudhaus, W.; Fürst von Lieven, A. (2003). "A phylogenetic classification and catalogue of the Diplogastridae (Secernentea, Nematoda)". Journal of Nematode Morphology and Systematics. 6: 43–90.
  2. ^ Susoy, V.; Ragsdale, E.J.; Kanzaki, N.; Sommer, R.J. (2015). "Rapid diversification associated with a macroevolutionary pulse of developmental plasticity". eLife. 4: e05463. doi:10.7554/eLife.05463. PMC 4357287. PMID 25650739.
  3. ^ Sudhaus, W.; Fürst von Lieven, A. (2003). "A phylogenetic classification and catalogue of the Diplogastridae (Secernentea, Nematoda)". Journal of Nematode Morphology and Systematics. 6: 43–90.
  4. ^ Andrassy I (2005). "free-living nematodes of Hungary (Nematoda, Errantia) Vol 1". Pedozoologica Hungarica Nr.3.
  5. ^ Kanzaki N, Ragsdale EJ, Giblin-Davis RM (2014). "Revision of the paraphyletic genus Koerneria Meyl, 1960 and resurrection of two other genera of Diplogastridae (Nematoda)". ZooKeys (442): 17–30. doi:10.3897/zookeys.442.7459. PMC 4205494. PMID 25349487.
  6. ^ Poinar, G.O. (2011). "The Evolutionary History of Nematodes: As Revealed in Stone, Amber and Mummies". Nematology Monographs and Perspectives Pages. 9: 91–93, 239–240, 324–325.