GGBN Object - https://id.ggbn.org/33E38V https://id.ggbn.org/33E38V

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Material Entity: tissue

Disposition: In collection

Identifier Status: ACTIVE

Last Update: January 30, 2025

Identification

Accepted NameTrichobilharzia stagnicolae (Talbot, 1936) McMullen & Beaver, 1945
TaxonomyAnimalia > Platyhelminthes > Trematoda > Diplostomida > Schistosomatidae > Trichobilharzia
Name According toCatalogue of Life
Original NameTrichobilharzia stagnicolae
Taxonomy Original NameAnimalia > Platyhelminthes > Trematoda > Strigeidida > Schistosomatidae > Trichobilharzia > stagnicolae
Status Original Nameaccepted species
Resolving Stateresolved on species level

Gathering

CountryUnited States (Central or North America)
LocalityPellston, University of Michigan Biological Station, Douglas Lake
Collector(s)Collector(s): Scott D. Snyder
Collector's numbers.n.
Collection Date1996-08-01
Collecting Sourcewild

Tissue

GUID/Occurrence IDhttp://arctos.database.museum/guid/MSB:Para:24775?pid=25888672
Catalog NumberMSB:Para:24775
Previous IDsGenBank=FJ174463, GenBank=FJ174479, GenBank=FJ174489, GenBank=FJ174546, other identifier=TrichoDL,
Collection CodePara
Institution CodeMSB
Institution Full NameArctos/Museum of Southwestern Biology
Record BasisPreservedSpecimen
Sample Typetissue
Establishment Meanswild caught
Type Statusvoucher of Trichobilharzia stagnicolae in Brant and Loker 2009

Preparation

Typewhole organism (95% ethanol)
StaffSara V. Brant

Permits

Status: Permit not available
Unknown permit type

Sequences

ENA number(s)FJ174463 , FJ174479 , FJ174489 , FJ174546
NCBI number(s)FJ174463 , FJ174479 , FJ174489 , FJ174546

Publications

Brant, SV. & Loker, ES., 2009. Molecular systematics of the avian schistosome genus Trichobilharzia (Trematoda: Schistosomatidae) in North America. The Journal of parasitology, 95(4), pp. 941–63

Trichobilharzia is a genus of threadlike schistosomes with a cosmopolitan distribution in birds. Species of Trichobilharzia achieve notoriety as major etiological agents of cercarial dermatitis, or swimmer's itch. There are 40 species described in the literature, for which the majority lacks molecular sequence information. To better understand the phylogenetic relationships, diversity, species boundaries, host use, and geographic distribution of this genus better, we surveyed 378 birds and over 10,000 snails from North America. The phylogenetic analysis was based on nuclear 18S, 28S rDNA, internal transcribed spacer region and mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I sequence data. Specimens were recovered that could be related to 6 of the 14 described species of Trichobilharzia from North America (Trichobilharzia physellae, Trichobilharzia querquedulae, Trichobilharzia szidati, Trichobilharzia stagnicolae, Trichobilharzia franki, and Trichobilharzia brantae). An additional 5 lineages were found that could not be related directly to previously described species. Trichobilharzia brantae, transmitted by Gyraulus parvus, grouped outside the clade containing the recognized species of Trichobilharzia. A subgroup of the Trichobilharzia clade designated Clade Q was comprised of closely related species whose adults and eggs are similar, yet the European species use lymnaeids whereas the North American species use physids as snail hosts. This molecular phylogeny provides a useful framework (1) to facilitate identification of worms, including those involved in dermatitis outbreaks; (2) to test hypotheses about the evolution, diversification, host-parasite interactions and character evolution of Trichobilharzia; and (3) to guide future taxonomic revision of Trichobilharzia.

PubMed 10 GGBN records

Dataset Description

Museum of Southwestern Biology (MSB) Parasite Specimens (Arctos) for GGBN

DescriptionDivision of Parasitology at the University of New Mexico's Museum of Southwestern Biology, Albuquerque, NM. Primarily metazoan endoparasites, especially helminths, including the personal collection of Robert L. Rausch and Virginia R. Rausch. The Rausch material, plus specimens from Beringian Coevolution Project make this an important aggregation of western arctic and subarctic parasites. It vouchers an active program in global schistosome diversity, and Long-Term Ecological Research at the Sevilleta National Wildife Refuge.
RightsTo the extent possible under law, the publisher has waived all rights to these data and has dedicated them to the Public Domain (CC0 1.0). Users may copy, modify, distribute and use the work, including for commercial purposes, without restriction.
CitationMuseum of Southwestern Biology Parasite Collection

Contacts

N/A
Mariel Campbell, campmlc@unm.edu
Collections Manager Parasite Division
Sara Brant, sbrant@unm.edu , 505-277-8171
Information Architect
John Wieczorek, gtuco.btuco@gmail.com , Bariloche, Río Negro AR, 8401
Arctos Database Programmer
Dusty McDonald, dustymc@gmail.com
no coordinates provided

Loan information

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not blocked tissue available for loan

Disposition: In collection

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