First Eastern Mediterranean Record of Xenoligophoroides cobitis, the Only Dactylogyrid Monogenean Infecting Mediterranean Gobies: Just Arrived or Missed the Boat?

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Authors

VANHOVE Maarten Pieterjan GIAKOUMI Sofia ZOGARIS Dimitris KOVACIC Marcelo HUYSE Tine

Year of publication 2022
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Diversity
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Web https://doi.org/10.3390/d14080580
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/d14080580
Keywords barcoding; Dactylogyridae; Dactylogyrinae; ectoparasites; giant goby; Gobiidae; Gobius cobitis; Greece; Monogenea; Platyhelminthes
Description Gobies and their ectoparasitic monogenean flatworms are promising models for species diversification because of their species richness. Recent decades have seen the discovery of several new species of Gyrodactylus (Monogenea: Gyrodactylidae) on European gobies, mostly in the sand goby lineage and especially in the eastern Mediterranean. However, the monogenean fauna of other gobies is much less understood. Therefore, we inspected five gobiid species (34 specimens, vouchered, with some representatives sequenced), sampled in Greece, for monogenean ectoparasites. Only specimens of the giant goby, Gobius cobitis, were infected; they harbored Xenoligophoroides cobitis (Monogenea: Dactylogyridae) on their gills. Here, we provide the first record from Greece, and the first ITS rDNA and COI sequences of the representative of this monotypic genus. Additionally, 28S rDNA was sequenced and compared with published data from across its known distribution, suggesting clinal variation. No sister-group for Xenoligophoroides could be proposed, nor could we explain the presence of a single known member of this genus on gobies, due to a lack of sequence data of closely related dactylogyrid monogeneans in public databases. Possible hypotheses include either the ancestral long-term presence on gobiids but "missing the boat" of the diversification events in the "Gobius-lineage", or a recent host switch from a non-gobiid host.
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