Heterorhabditis
atacamensis Eddington, Buddie, Moore, France,Merino & Hunt, 2011
Summary
- A new Heterorhabditis
species of entomopathogenic nematode was isolated from soil of the
Atacama Desert in Chile.
The new species is characterized by morphometrics of the infective juvenile
(IJ) with length (L) ¼ 611
(578–666) mm, head to
excretory pore length (EP) ¼ 115
(101–126) mm, tail ¼ 69 (62–79) mm long, (EP/tail) £ 100 (E%) ¼ 165 (149–182) and L/maximum
body diameter (ratio a) ¼ 28 (25–31). The male has
spicules 45 (40–49) mm
long, gubernaculum 20 (17–22) mm
long and (spicule length/anal body diameter) £ 100 (SW%) ¼ 205 (179–249). The hermaphroditic adult has shallow cuticular
folds immediately anterior and posterior to the vulva, a slight post-anal
swelling and a finely rounded tail terminus. Morphologically, H.
atacamensis n.
sp. resembles H. safricana, H. marelatus, H.
downesi and H.
amazonensis, but can be distinguished by characters of adult and IJ
stages. In particular, for adult males, H. atacamensis n. sp. differs from H.
amazonensis by
the number and orientation of the genital papillae and fromH. downesi by the position of the
excretory pore; by the shape of the female tail terminus from H. downesi and by the position of the IJ
hemizonid from H. marelatus. Heterorhabditis atacamensis
n. sp. is further characterized by internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and
D2D3 rDNA sequences, the closest species, H. safricana, being separated
by 13 bp across 730 bp of the ITS (incorporating ITS1 (partial sequence), 5.8S
(complete sequence), ITS2 (complete sequence)) and 5 bp across 592 bp of the
partial 28S (incorporating D2D3) sequence. The morphological and molecular data
confirm that H. atacamensis
n. sp. is a valid species.