Parasitology, Harold W. Manter Laboratory of

 

Date of this Version

2-1966

Comments

Published in the Journal of Parasitology (February 1966) 52(1): 26-38. Copyright 1966, the American Society of Parasitologists. Used by permission.

Abstract

Discrepant conclusions in the literature concerning the specific distinction of the two spe- cies assigned to the genus Ogmogaster Jägerskiöld, 1891, necessitated a reevaluation of the taxonomic characters used in separating these trematodes. Study of material from baleen whales from North Pacific waters and from baleen whales and lobodont pinnipeds from the southern hemisphere disclosed the existence of two species which can be distinguished by consistent differences in numbers of ventral ridges, ratio of length of cirrus sac to length of body, and by other morphological characters. Since the original description of O. plicatus (Creplin, 1829) does not permit certain identification of the species, and since the description of O. plicatus by Jägerskiöld (1891) is a composite, including data for two species, the latter is redescribed on the basis of specimens from baleen whales (Balaenoptera spp.) from northern waters. The description of O. antarcticus Johnston, 1931, is emended to encompass the range of variation observed in specimens from baleen whales from both hemispheres and from pinnipeds from the Antarctic. In addition, O. pentalineatus sp. n. is described from the gray whale, Eschrichtius gibbosus (Erxleben), from waters near St. Lawrence Island, in the Bering Sea. The latter is distinguished from its congeners by its small size, few ventral ridges (five), and by other morphological characters. Parasite-host relationships and other aspects of the biology of these trematodes are briefly discussed.

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