Heterorhabditis
beicherriana Li, Liu, Nermut, Puza & Mracek, 2012
Summary
- A new heterorhabditid nematode was
recovered in orchards in the Beijing
area. Morphological and molecular data confirmed this nematode as a new
species, which belongs to the bacteriophora-group with sister taxa Heterorhabditis
bacteriophora and H. georgiana. The nematode was named H.
beicherriana n. sp. and is characterized by males, hermaphrodites, females
and infective juveniles. In males the peloderan bursa is characterized by the
formula 1 2 3 3, spicule length 45 (41–51) μm. Male body length is
substantially higher than that of H. bacteriophora and H. georgiana (1028
μm
vs 820 and 838 μm, respectively). In hermaphrodites there are six labial and
six cephalic papillae; the vulval pattern is smooth, rounded or slightly elliptical.
Tail is conoid with a moderately prominent post-anal swelling slightly longer
than anal body width. In females vulval lips are non-protruding, tail conical
without or with a slightly developed post-anal swelling, about twice as long as
anal body width. In infective juveniles, the body is elongate, slender and
straight when heat-killed, on average 639 μm long, which is longer
than in H. bacteriophora (558 μm) and H. georgiana (598
μm),
respectively. Heterorhabditis beicherriana n. sp. is further
characterized by internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and D2D3 rDNA sequences, the
most similar species, H. georgiana, being separated by 21 bp across 994
bp of the ITS and 3 across 890 bp of the D2D3 region. ITS and D2D3 regions of H.
beicherriana evolved five and one autapomorphies, respectively.
Phylogenetic analyses placed H. beicherriana n. sp. as a member of the bacteriophora-group.