KINGDOM PROTISTA
SUBKINGDOM PROTOZOA
PHYLUM MASTIGOPHORA
CLASS KINETOPLASTIDEA
ORDER KINETOPLASTIDA
SUBORDER BODONINA
FAMILY BODONIDAE
Ichthyobodo sp. |
(F) |
|
|
Syn.: Costia sp. |
|
Location: not specified Host: fish Dist.: Bangladesh Record: Chowdhury 1993[4] |
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PHYLUM CILIOPHORA
CLASS KINETOPHRAGMINOPHOREA
SUBCLASS HYPOSTOMATA
ORDER CYRTOPHORIDA
FAMILY CHILODONELLIDAE
Chilodonella sp. |
(F) |
Location: gills, skin Hosts: Catla catla (1,2) Cyprinus carpio (2) Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Hossain and Khan 1992 (-); 2. Banu et al. 1993 (Dhaka), 3. 1999 (-) |
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CLASS OLIGOHYMENOPHOREA
SUBCLASS HYMENOSTOMATA
ORDER HYMENOSTOMATIDA
SUBORDER OPHRYOGLENINA
FAMILY ICHTHYOPHTHIRIIDAE
Ichthyophthirius multifiliis Fouquet, 1876[5] |
(F) |
Location: body surface Hosts: Catla catla (4)
Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Hossain and Barua 1991 (-); 2. Hossain and Khan 1992 (-); 3. Chowdhury 1993 (-)[6]; 4. Banu et al. 1993 (Dhaka), 5. 1999 (-) Remarks: Hossain and Barua (1991) noted that ichthyophthiriosis is the most common protozoan disease found in Bangladesh. |
|
Ichthyophthirius sp. |
(F) |
|
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?Includes: "white spot" auctorum |
|
Location: not specified Hosts: Cirrhinus cirrhosus (1) fish (2) Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Collis 1993 (Dhaka)[7]; 2. Hossain 1993 (-) Remarks: We tentatively refer the above records of "white spot" to Ichthyophthirius. |
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SUBCLASS PERITRICHIA
ORDER PERITRICHIDA
SUBORDER SESSILINA
FAMILY EPISTYLIDIDAE
Apiosoma sp. |
(F) |
Location: not specified Host: fish Dist.: Bangladesh Record: Banu et al. 1999 |
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SUBORDER MOBILINA
FAMILY TRICHODINIDAE
Trichodina sp. |
(F) |
Location: gills, skin Hosts: Catla catla (6)
Dist.: Chittagong, Dhaka, Rajshahi Records: 1. Hossain and Khan 1992 (-); 2. Anon. 1992 (-), 3. 1993 (Chittagong, Rajshahi); 4. Chowdhury 1993 (-)[8]; 5. Hossain 1993 (-); 6. Banu et al. 1993 (Dhaka), 7. 1999 (-) |
|
Tripartiella sp. |
(F) |
Location: not specified Host: Anabas testudineus Dist.: Chittagong Record: Anon. 1993 |
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PHYLUM MYXOZOA
CLASS MYXOSPOREA
ORDER BIVALVULIDA
SUBORDER PLATYSPORINA
FAMILY MYXOBOLIDAE
Myxobolus sp. |
(F) |
Location: gills, skin Hosts: Barbodes gonionotus (7)
Dist.: Chittagong, Dhaka, Rajshahi Records: 1. Sanaullah and Ahmed 1980 (Chittagong, Dhaka); 2. Ahmed 1982 (-), 3.1993 (-); 4. Hossain and Khan 1992 (-); 5. Sanaullah 1993 (-); 6. Hossain 1993 (-); 7. Anon. 1993 (Rajshahi)[9]; 8. Banu et al. 1993 (Dhaka), 9. 1999 (-) Remarks: Sanaullah and Ahmed (1980) reported on the pathology of gill myxoboliasis causing heavy mortalities in cultured Indian major carps. |
|
Thelohanellus dogieli Akhmerov, 1955 |
(F) |
Location: epidermis at base of fins Host: Labeo rohita Dist.: Dhaka Record: Hossain et al. 1978 |
|
Unidentified Myxobolidae
Myxobolidae gen. sp. |
(F) |
|
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Includes: "gill myxoboliasis" |
|
Location: gills Host: Catla catla Dist.: Chittagong Record: Golder et al. 1983 Remarks: This report is based on the results of a survey of fish farmers completed by Golder et al. (1983). While "rui," "mrigal" and "carpio" were also present along with "catla" in ponds showing gill myxoboliasis, it is not clear if these other cyprinids were also infected. |
|
Unidentified Protozoa
Protozoa gen. sp. |
(F) |
Location: skin, muscles Hosts: Catla catla Heteropneustes fossilis Dist.: Bangladesh Record: Anon. 1974 (-) |
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KINGDOM ANIMALIA
SUBKINGDOM EUMETAZOA
PHYLUM PLATYHELMINTHES
CLASS TREMATODA
SUBCLASS DIGENEA
ORDER STRIGEIDA
SUPERFAMILY CLINOSTOMOIDEA
FAMILY CLINOSTOMIDAE
Clinostomum complanatum (Rudolphi, 1814) Braun, 1899 metacercaria |
(F) |
|
|
Syn.: Clinostomum marginatum (Rudolphi, 1819) |
|
Location: skin, fins, gills, muscle Hosts: Clarias batrachus (2) Heteropneustes fossilis (1) Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Chandra and Banerjee 1993b (Dhaka); 2. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: The synonymy follows Gibson (1996). |
|
Clinostomum giganticum Agarwal, 1960 metacercaria |
(F) |
Location: body cavity Host: Nandus nandus Dist.: Dhaka Record: Chandra and Banerjee 1993b |
|
Clinostomum sp. Metacercaria |
(F) |
Location: body cavity, muscle Hosts: Clarias batrachus (2) Heteropneustes fossilis (1) Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Islam et al. 1982 (Dhaka); 2. Banu et al. 1993 (Dhaka) |
|
Euclinostomum heterostomum (Rudolphi, 1809) Travassos, 1928 metacercaria |
(F) |
Location: liver Hosts: Channa punctata C. striata Dist.: Dhaka Record: Chandra and Banerjee 1993b |
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Euclinostomum multicaecum Tubangui and Masiluñgan, 1935 metacercaria[10] |
(F) |
Location: liver, muscles, kidney, pharyngeal wall, external surface of alimentary canal Hosts: Channa punctata (2,3,4,5)
Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Hossain et al. 1982 (Dhaka); 2. Chandra 1983a (Dhaka), 3. 1984a (Dhaka), 4. 1984b (Dhaka); 5. Huq et al. 1983 (Dhaka) |
|
Euclinostomum sp. Metacercaria |
(F) |
Location: liver Hosts: Ompok pabda (2) Dist.: DhakaHeteropneustes fossilis (1) Records: 1. Amin et al. 1982 (Dhaka); 2. Hussain and Ali 1986 (Dhaka) |
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SUPERFAMILY DIPLOSTOMOIDEA
FAMILY DIPLOSTOMIDAE
Neascus sp. metacercaria |
(F) |
Location: [skin] Hosts: Catla catla Dist.: ChittagongCirrhinus cirrhosus Record: Sanaullah 1984[11] |
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Posthodiplostomum minimum (MacCallum, 1921) Dubois, 1936 metacercaria |
(F) |
Location: muscle, viscera Host: Clarias batrachus Dist.: Bangladesh Record: Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 |
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SUPERFAMILY GYMNOPHALLOIDEA
FAMILY BUCEPHALIDAE
Bucephalus mystusi Chandra and Banerjee, 1993 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Sperata aor Dist.: Dhaka Record: Chandra and Banerjee 1993a |
|
Bucephalus polymorphus Baer, 1827 |
(F) |
Location: stomach Host: Atropus atropos Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Bashirullah 1973a Remarks: As Bucephalus polymorphus is a parasite of European freshwater fishes (see Hoffman 1998), this report from a marine fish from Bangladesh is considered a misidentification. |
|
Bucephalus sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Silonia silondia (3,4) Sperata aor (1,2,3,4) Dist.: Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 2. Ahmed 1981 (-); 3. Chandra 1992a (Dhaka), 4. 1993b (Dhaka) |
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Prosorhynchoides aspinosiensis (Bashirullah and Hafizuddin, 1971) n. comb. |
(F) |
|
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Syn.: Neobucephalopsis aspinosiensis Bashirullah and Hafizuddin, 1971[12] |
|
Location: intestine Host: Clupisoma garua Dist.: Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: Bashirullah and Hafizuddin 1971 (Dhaka); Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Ahmed 1981 (-); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
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Prosorhynchoides clupisomius (Bashirullah and Hafizuddin, 1976) n. comb. |
(F) |
|
|
Syn.: Neobucephalopsis clupisomius Bashirullah and Hafizuddin, 1976[13] |
|
Location: intestine Host: Eutropiichthys murius Dist.: Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Bashirullah and Hafizuddin 1976 (Dhaka); Ahmed 1981 (-); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
Prosorhynchoides sp. |
(F) |
|
|
Syn.: Bucephalopsis sp. Neobucephalopsis sp. |
|
Location: intestine Hosts: Eutropiichthys murius (1,2,3) Sperata aor (3) Dist.: Dhaka?, Sylhet? Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 2. Ahmed 1981 (-); 3. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: The synonymy follows Srivastava and Chauhan (1973) and is supported by Dr. R.M. Overstreet (pers. comm.). |
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FAMILY FAUSTULIDAE
Faustula brevichrus (Srivastava, 1935) Yamaguti, 1958 |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Tenualosa ilisha Dist.: Chittagong, Bay of Bengal Records: Bashirullah 1973a (Bay of Bengal); Zaman et al. 1992b (Chittagong), 1994 (Chittagong); D'Silva and Khatoon 1997 (Bay of Bengal) Remarks: This species was redescribed by D'Silva and Khatoon (1997). |
|
Faustula sp. |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Hilsa kelee Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Bashirullah 1973a |
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FAMILY FELLODISTOMIDAE
Steringotrema sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Puntius sophore Dist.: Dhaka?, Sylhet? Records: Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Ahmed 1981 (-) Remarks: As members of this genus are typically parasites of marine teleosts, this record from a freshwater cyprinid is rather dubius. |
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SUPERFAMILY HEMIUROIDEA
FAMILY ACCACOELIIDAE
SUBFAMILY ACCACOELIINAE
Rhynchopharynx paradoxa Odhner, 1928 |
(M) |
Location: stomach, intestine Host: Macrognathus aculeatus Dist: Bangladesh Record: Khanum and Parveen 1997 Remarks: Rhynchopharynx is a monospecific genus that is known only from the ocean sunfish (Mola mola), a species widely distributed in the world's warm and temperate oceans (see Bray and Gibson 1977). We consider the above record from a freshwater fish of Bangladesh to involve a misidentification. |
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FAMILY BUNOCOTYLIDAE
SUBFAMILY APHANURINAE
Aphanurus stossichi (Monticelli, 1891) Looss, 1907 |
(M) |
Location: stomach Hosts: Dussumieria acuta (2) Tenualosa ilisha (1,3,4,5) Dist.: Chittagong, Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Bay of Bengal); 2. Ahmed et al. 1986 (Bay of Bengal); 3. Zaman et al. 1992b (Chittagong), 4. 1994 (Chittagong); 5. D'Silva and Khatoon 1997 (Bay of Bengal) Remarks: This species was redescribed by D'Silva and Khatoon (1997). |
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SUBFAMILY OPISTHADENINAE
Opisthadena sp. |
(M) |
Location: stomach Host: Dussumieria acuta Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Ahmed et al. 1986 |
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FAMILY DEROGENIDAE
SUBFAMILY GONOCERCINAE
Gonocera crassa Manter, 1934 |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Ompok bimaculatus Dist.: Dhaka Records: Khanum et al. 1996 (Dhaka); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: This digenean is a stomach parasite of marine fishes. Its report from a freshwater silurid catfish of Bangladesh likely involves a misidentification. Gibson (1976) considered Gonocerca crassa a probable synonym of G. phycidis Manter, 1925. |
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SUBFAMILY HALIPEGINAE
Genarchopsis bangladensis Bashirullah and Elahi, 1972[14] |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Channa punctata Dist.: Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: Bashirullah and Elahi 1972a (Dhaka); Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Ahmed 1981 (-) |
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Genarchopsis bashiri Hafizuddin and Khan, 1973 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Heteropneustes fossilis Dist.: Dhaka Records: Hafizuddin and Khan 1973a (Dhaka); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
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Genarchopsis dasus (Gupta, 1951) Yamaguti, 1958 |
(F) |
|
|
Syn.: Ophiocorchis dasus Gupta, 1951 |
|
Location: stomach, intestine Hosts: Channa punctata (1,2) Glossogobius giuris (1,2,3) Dist: Dhaka Records: 1. Ahmed 1981 (-); 2. Ahmed and Saha 1983 (Dhaka); 3. Chandra and Banerjee 1993b (Dhaka) |
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Genarchopsis lobata (Srivastava, 1933) Yamaguti, 1954 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Channa gachua Dist.: Dhaka?, Sylhet? Records: Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Ahmed 1981 (-) |
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Genarchopsis macrocotyle Coil and Kuntz, 1960 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Channa punctata Dist.: Dhaka Record: Coil and Kuntz 1960 |
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Genarchopsis ozakii Bashirullah and Elahi, 1972[15] |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine Host: Channa punctata Dist.: Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: Bashirullah and Elahi 1972a (Dhaka); Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Ahmed 1981 (-) |
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Genarchopsis wallagoni Chandra and Banerjee, 1993 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Wallago attu Dist.: Dhaka Record: Chandra and Banerjee 1993b |
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Genarchopsis sp. |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine Hosts: Clupisoma garua (3)
Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Ahmed and Begum 1978 (Dhaka); 2. Chandra 1992a (Dhaka), 3. 1993b (Dhaka) |
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FAMILY DIDYMOZOIDAE
Philopinna sp. |
(F) |
Location: muscle Hosts: Channa punctata (2,3) Heteropneustes fossilis (1) Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Amin et al. 1982 (Dhaka); 2. Hossain et al. 1982 (Dhaka); 3. Huq et al. 1983 (Dhaka) Remarks: The genus Philopinna was established by Yamaguti (1936) for P. higai Yamaguti, 1936, a parasite of the fins and orbit of Sarcocheilichthys variegatus, a Japanese freshwater fish. Didymozoids are typically tissue parasites of marine fishes. |
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FAMILY HEMIURIDAE
SUBFAMILY DINURINAE
Dinurinae gen. sp. |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Rastrelliger kanagurta Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Bashirullah 1973a |
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SUBFAMILY ELYTROPHALLINAE
Lecithocladium excisum (Rudolphi, 1819) Lühe, 1901 |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Parastromateus niger Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Bashirullah 1973a Remarks: The taxonomic history and host and geographic range of Lecithocladium excisum were reviewed by Gibson and Bray (1986), who concluded that its confirmed distribution was the Mediterranean and Black seas and the Northeast Atlantic region. As these authors doubted the occurrence of L. excisum in the Indian Ocean, this report from a marine fish of the Bay of Bengal requires substantiation. The life cycle in the Northeast Atlantic was studied by Køie (1991). Cercariae found in naturally infected gastropods (Philine aperta) were used to experimentally infect various genera of marine copepods. Ctenophores and polychaetes naturally infected with metacercariae were considered likely to act as transport hosts. Adults occur in the stomach of mackerel (Scomber scomberus, S. japonicus) and immature specimens in Trachurus trachurus (see Gibson and Bray 1986). |
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Lecithocladium harpodontis Srivastava, 1937 |
(M) |
|
|
Syn.: Lecithocladium ilishae Bashirullah and D'Silva, 1973 |
|
Location: stomach Host: Tenualosa ilisha Dist.: Chittagong, Bay of Bengal Records: Bashirullah and D'Silva 1973 (Bay of Bengal); Bashirullah 1973a (Bay of Bengal); Zaman et al. 1992b (Chittagong), 1994 (Chittagong) Remarks: The synonymy follows Gibson and Bray (1986). These authors noted that because there are many poorly described species of Lecithocladium in the Indo-Malay Region, the status of species in this part of the world is highly confused. |
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Lecithocladium magnacetabulum Yamaguti, 1934 |
(M) |
Location: stomach Host: Tenualosa ilisha Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Bashirullah 1973a |
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Lecithocladium megalaspis Yamaguti, 1953 |
(M) |
|
|
Syn.: Lecithocladium dawesi Bashirullah and D'Silva, 1973 |
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Location: intestine Host: Selaroides leptolepis Dist.: Bay of Bengal Records: Bashirullah and D'Silva 1973 (Bay of Bengal); Bashirullah 1973a (Bay of Bengal) Remarks: The synonymy follows Gibson and Bray (1986). |
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Lecithocladium seriolellae Manter, 1954 |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Selaroides leptolepis Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Bashirullah 1973a |
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Lecithocladium sp. |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Pampus argenteus Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Bashirullah 1973a |
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SUBFAMILY HEMIURINAE
Hemiurus appendiculatus (Rudolphi, 1802) Looss, 1899 |
(M) |
Location: stomach Host: Dussumieria acuta Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Ahmed et al. 1986 Remarks: Gibson (1996) noted that Hemiurus appendiculatus is restricted to clupeids of the genus Alosa and to Mediterranean and European Atlantic waters as far north as southern Norway; thus, this record is certainly based on a misidentification. |
|
Hemiurus sp. |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Selaroides leptolepis Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Bashirullah 1973a |
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Parahemiurus sp. |
(M) |
Location: stomach Host: Dussumieria acuta Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Ahmed et al. 1986 |
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SUBFAMILY LECITHOCHIRIINAE
Lecithochiriinae gen. sp. |
(M) |
Location: stomach Host: Lepturacanthus savala Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Bashirullah 1973a |
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Unidentified Hemiuridae
Hemiuridae gen. sp. |
(M) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Harpadon neherius (1) Lates calcarifer (2) Dist.: Chittagong?, Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Bay of Bengal); 2. Chandra 1992a (Chittagong?)[16],[17] |
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FAMILY ISOPARORCHIIDAE
Isoparorchis hypselobagri (Billet, 1898) Ejsmont, 1932 adult and metacercaria[18] |
(F) |
Location: swimbladder, body cavity, muscle, liver, stomach, intestine, visceral surfaces Hosts: Channa marulius (1,2,3,4)
Dist.: Chittagong, Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: 1. Bashirullah 1972a (Dhaka), 2. 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 3. Anon. 1974 (Chittagong); 4. Ahmed 1981 (-), 5. 1996 (-); 6. Chowdhury et al. 1986 (Dhaka); 7. Chandra and Golder 1987 (Chittagong); 8. Golder and Chandra 1987 (Chittagong); 9. Golder et al. 1987 (Chittagong); 10. Rahman 1989 (-); 11. Chandra 1992a (Dhaka), 12. 1993b (Dhaka), 13. 1994b (Dhaka); 14. Chandra and Banerjee 1993a (Dhaka); 15. Khanum et al. 1996 (Dhaka); 16. Khanum and Parveen 1997 (-); 17. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: The role of fish in the life cycle of this species has been discussed by Bashirullah (1972a) and Chandra and Banerjee (1993a). Adults are found in the swimbladder of siluriform catfishes, with metacercariae occurring in the muscles of many siluriform and non-siluriform fishes. Immature flukes are found in the body cavity of Wallago attu and occasionally Channa punctata; Isoparorchis hypselobagri thus appears to use piscivorous fishes as paratenic hosts. Although Bashirullah (1972a) postulated that the parasite also matures in fish-eating mammals, including man, Chandra (1993a) pointed out that these findings are probably cases of pseudoparasitism. |
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ORDER ECHINOSTOMATIDA
SUPERFAMILY ECHINOSTOMATOIDEA
FAMILY HAPLOPORIDAE
Haploporus sp. |
(F?) |
Location: not specified Host: Mugil cephalus Dist.: Chittagong?[19] Record: Chandra 1993b |
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FAMILY PSILOSTOMIDAE
Psilostomum sp. [metacercaria?] |
(M?) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Lates calcarifer Dist.: Chittagong?[20] Record: Chandra 1993b Remarks: Psilostomids are occasionally found in fish as encysted metacercariae, adults occurring in birds and occasionally mammals (see Gibson 1996). Members of the genus Psilostomum are mainly parasites of aquatic birds; however, one species, P. chilkai Chatterji, 1958, (syn. of Staffordiella chilkai according to Mehra (1966)) has been described from the intestine of a fish (Lates calcarifer) in India. The above record may be based on a metacercaria or an accidental infection (a metacercaria liberated in the intestine of a piscivorous fish). |
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ORDER PLAGIORCHIIDA
SUPERFAMILY ALLOCREADIOIDEA
FAMILY ALLOCREADIIDAE
Allocreadium bengalensis Banerjee and Chandra, 1993 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Mastacembelus armatus Dist.: Dhaka Record: Banerjee and Chandra 1993 |
|
Allocreadium glossogobium Banerjee and Chandra, 1993 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Glossogobius giuris Dist.: Dhaka Record: Banerjee and Chandra 1993 |
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Allocreadium handiai Pande, 1937 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Channa punctata (1) Clupisoma garua (3) Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Coil and Kuntz 1960 (Dhaka); 2. Banerjee and Chandra 1993 (Dhaka); 3. Chandra 1993b (Dhaka) |
|
Allocreadium mahaseri Pande, 1939 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Ompok bimaculatus Dist.: Dhaka Records: Khanum et al. 1996 (Dhaka); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
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Allocreadium mehrai Gupta, 1957 |
(F) |
|
|
Syn.: Rhynchocreadium aculeatus Srivastava, 1962 |
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Location: intestine Hosts: Macrognathus aculeatus Mastacembelus armatus Dist.: Dhaka Record: Banerjee and Chandra 1993 Remarks: The synonymy follows Kakaji (1969). |
|
Allocreadium minutum Banerjee and Chandra, 1993 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Anabas testudineus Dist.: Dhaka Record: Banerjee and Chandra 1993 |
|
Allocreadium mymensinghi Banerjee and Chandra, 1993 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Heteropneustes fossilis Dist.: Dhaka Record: Banerjee and Chandra 1993 |
|
Allocreadium ovatum Banerjee and Chandra, 1993 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Glossogobius giuris Dist.: Dhaka Record: Banerjee and Chandra 1993 |
|
Allocreadium sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Pangasius pangasius Dist.: Dhaka Record: Chandra 1993b |
|
Macrolecithus sp. |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine Hosts: Heteropneustes fossilis (1,2,4) Macrognathus pancalus (3) Dist.: Barisal, Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 2. Ahmed 1981 (-); 3. Ahmed and Saha 1983 (Barisal, Dhaka); 4. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
FAMILY OPECOELIDAE
SUBFAMILY OPECOELINAE
Coitocaecum sp. |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine Host: Sperata aor Dist.: Barisal, Dhaka Records: Ahmed 1981 (-); Ahmed and Saha 1983 (Barisal, Dhaka); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
Crowcrocaecum channai Bashirullah and Elahi, 1972 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Channa marulius Dist.: Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: Bashirullah and Elahi 1972b (Dhaka); Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Ahmed 1981 (-) |
|
Neopecoelina saharanpuriensis Gupta, 1955[21] |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine, stomach wall [?], intestinal wall [?] Hosts: Anabas testudineus (5)
Dist.: Barisal, Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: 1. Bashirullah and Eliah 1972b (Dhaka); 2. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 3. Ahmed 1981 (-); 4. Ahmed and Saha 1983 (Barisal, Dhaka); 5. Akther et al. 1997 (Dhaka); 6. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
Neopecoelina sp. |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine, swimbladder [?] Hosts: Channa punctata (3) Heteropneustes fossilis (1,2,3) Dist.: Barisal, Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 2. Ahmed 1981 (-); 3. Ahmed and Saha 1983 (Barisal, Dhaka) |
|
Opegaster beliyai Pande, 1937 |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine, body cavity [?] Hosts: Glossogobius giuris (1,2,3,4,7,8) Heteropneustes fossilis (5,6,9) Dist.: Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 2. Ahmed and Begum 1978 (Dhaka); 3. Ahmed 1981 (-); 4. Ahmed and Saha 1983 (Dhaka); 5. Akhtar et al. 1992 (Dhaka); 6. Khanum and Begum 1992 (Dhaka); 7. Khanum et al. 1992 (-), 8. 1994 (Dhaka); 9. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
Opegaster sp. |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine, stomach wall [?] Host: Glossogobius giuris Dist.: Barisal, Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Ahmed and Begum 1978 (Barisal, Dhaka); Ahmed 1981 (-); Ahmed and Saha 1983 (Barisal, Dhaka) |
|
SUBFAMILY PLAGIOPORINAE
Cotylogonoporum orfeum Thapar and Dayal, 1934 |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine Hosts: Macrognathus aculeatus Mastacembelus armatus Dist: Bangladesh Record: Khanum and Parveen 1997 |
|
Eucreadium daccai Bashirullah and Elahi, 1972[22] |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Channa punctata Dist.: Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: Bashirullah and Elahi 1972b (Dhaka); Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Ahmed 1981 (-) |
|
Macvicaria crassigula (Linton, 1910) Bartoli, Bray and Gibson, 1989 |
(M) |
|
|
Syn.: Plagioporus crassigula (Linton, 1910) |
|
Location: stomach, intestine Host: Heteropneustes fossilis Dist.: Dhaka Records: Akhtar et al. 1992 (Dhaka); Khanum and Begum 1992 (Dhaka); 3. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: Bartoli et al. (1989) transferred this species to the genus Macvicaria and provided a redescription and a summary of its host and geographical distributions. Definitive hosts are marine fishes (mainly Sparidae) of the North Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea, while records from other geographic areas (Indian and South Atlantic oceans) were considered questionable. Reports of this digenean from stinging catfish from Bangladesh are thus likely erroneous. |
|
Podocotyle atomon (Rudolphi, 1802) Dujardin, 1845 metacercaria |
(M) |
Location: swimbladder Host: Nandus nandus Dist.: Dhaka Record: Nahida et al. 1994 Remarks: This species is a parasite of the pyloric caeca and intestine of marine fishes of the North Atlantic Ocean. The above record from the swimbladder of a freshwater fish of Bangladesh is considered a misidentification. |
|
FAMILY OPISTHOLEBETIDAE
Opistholebes sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Puntius sophore Dist.: Dhaka?, Sylhet? Records: Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Ahmed 1981 (-) Remarks: Members of this genus are typically parasites of marine fishes (pufferfishes). |
|
SUPERFAMILY LEPOCREADIOIDEA
FAMILY ACANTHOCOLPIDAE
Acanthocolpus liodorus Lühe, 1906 |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Chirocentrus dorab Dist.: Bay of Bengal Records: Bashirullah 1973a (Bay of Bengal); D'Silva and Khatoon 1997 (Bay of Bengal) Remarks: This species was redescribed by D'Silva and Khatoon (1997). |
|
Acanthocolpus luehei Srivastava, 1939[23] |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Chirocentrus dorab Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: D'Silva and Khatoon 1997 Remarks: Although various authors have considered Acanthocolpus luehei a synonym of A. liodorus Lühe, 1906, D'Silva and Khatoon (1997), who redescribed both species, considered them distinct. |
|
SUPERFAMILY OPISTHORCHIOIDEA
FAMILY CRYPTOGONIMIDAE
Aphallus sp. |
(F) |
Location: unspecified Host: Heteropneustes fossilis Dist.: Dhaka Record: Amin et al. 1982 |
|
FAMILY OPISTHORCHIIDAE
Allogomtiotrema attu (Gupta, 1955) Yamaguti, 1958 |
(F) |
Location: stomach, body cavity [?] Hosts: Channa marulius (1)
Dist: Bangladesh Records: 1. Khanum et al. 1993 (-); 2. Khanum and Parveen 1997 (-) |
|
Opisthorchis bagarius Chandra and Banerjee, 1992 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Bagarius bagarius Dist.: Dhaka Record: Chandra and Banerjee 1992 Remarks: Members of the family Opisthorchiidae typically use fish as second intermediate hosts where they occur as encysted metacercariae, and mature in the intestine of piscivorous mammals and birds. This finding of mature specimens from the intestine of a freshwater fish is unusual. |
|
Opisthorchis sp. metacercaria |
(F) |
Location: body cavity Host: Rita rita Dist.: Dhaka?, Sylhet? Records: Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Ahmed 1981 (-); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: The above records are assumed to involve the encysted metacercarial stage. |
|
SUPERFAMILY PLAGIORCHIOIDEA
FAMILY GORGODERIDAE
Phyllodistomum chauhani Motwani and Srivastava, 1961 |
(F) |
Location: intestine [?], body cavity [?] Hosts: Channa punctata (1) Eutropiichthys vacha (2) Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Chandra and Banerjee 1993a (Dhaka); 2. Chandra 1993b (Dhaka) Remarks: Members of the genus Phyllodistomum are parasites of the urinary bladder and ureters. Reports from other locations are probably due to parasite dislocation during host dissection. |
|
Phyllodistomum folium (Olfers, 1816) Braun, 1899 |
(F) |
Location: urinary bladder, intestine [?], body cavity [?], mesenteries [?] Hosts: Channa striata (1,2)
Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Ahmed and Begum 1978 (Dhaka); 2. Ahmed 1981 (-); 3. Khanum et al. 1992 (-), 4. 1994 (Dhaka), 5. 1996 (Dhaka); 6. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: Phyllodistomum folium is a parasite of the urinary system of European freshwater fishes. Its occurrence in South Asia requires confirmation, and we regard these records as based on likely misidentifications. Phyllodistimum spp. are typically parasites of the urinary system. Reports from other locations given by Bangladeshi authors are likely the result of parasite dislocation during host dissection. |
|
Phyllodistomum yosufzaii Bashirullah and Islam, 1970[24] |
(F) |
Location: swimbladder [?] Host: Rita rita Dist.: Dhaka?, Sylhet Records: Bashirullah and Islam 1970 (Sylhet); Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Ahmed 1981 (-); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: Phyllodistomum spp. are typically parasites of the ureters and urinary bladder. |
|
Phyllodistomum sp. |
(F) |
Location: urinary bladder Host: Channa marulius Dist.: Dhaka Records: Ahmed and Begum 1978 (Dhaka); Ahmed 1981 (-) |
|
FAMILY LECITHODENDRIIDAE
Pleurogenes attui Kakaji, 1968 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Ompok bimaculatus (1) O. pabda (2) Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Khanum et al. 1996 (Dhaka); 2. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: Gibson (1998) noted that Pleurogenes spp. are parasites of amphibians. Records from Bangladeshi fishes might thus be due to accidental infection or temporary pseudoparasitism, a result of a carnivorous fish having consumed an infected frog. |
|
Pleurogenes pabdai Pande, 1937 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Ompok bimaculatus (1,2) O. pabda (1,2) Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Khanum et al. 1996 (Dhaka); 2. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
Pleurogenoides notopteri Bashirullah and Hafizuddin, 1976[25] |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Notopterus notopterus Dist.: Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Bashirullah and Hafizuddin 1976 (Dhaka); Ahmed 1981 (-) Remarks: As members of this genus are typically parasites of amphibians, it is possible that the occurrence of Pleurogenoides notopteri in a freshwater fish is the result of an accidental infection. |
|
FAMILY MASENIIDAE
Eumasenia sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Heteropneustes fossilis Dist.: Dhaka?, Sylhet? Records: Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Ahmed 1981 (-); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
Masenia dayali Gupta, 1955 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Clarias batrachus Dist.: Bangladesh Record: Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 |
|
FAMILY ORIENTOCREADIIDAE
Orientocreadium batrachoides Tubangui, 1931 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Clarias batrachus (1,2,3,7) Heteropneustes fossilis (4,5,6) Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Rashid et al. 1983 (Dhaka), 2. 1984 (Dhaka); 3. Rashid and Haque 1984a (Dhaka); 4. Chandra 1992a (Dhaka), 5. 1993b (Dhaka), 6. 1994a (Dhaka); 7. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: The life cycle of this trematode was studied experimentally by Sirikantayakul (1985). In the Philippines, the snail Lymnaea viridis serves as both the first intermediate and the primary second intermediate host. A few metacercariae were also recovered from catfish (Clarias macrocephalus) and tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus) fry and other aquatic organisms expermentally exposed to newly emerged cercariae. |
|
SUPERFAMILY ZOOGONOIDEA
FAMILY LISSORCHIIDAE
Asymphylodora indica Srivastava, 1936 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Channa punctata Dist.: Dhaka Record: Coil and Kuntz 1960 |
|
Palaeorchis sp. |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine Hosts: Channa punctata (3)
Dist.: Barisal, Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 2. Ahmed 1981 (-); 3. Ahmed and Saha 1983 (Barisal, Dhaka); 4. Chandra 1993b (Dhaka) |
|
Unidentified Digenea
Digenea gen. sp. adult and metacercaria |
(F) |
|
|
Includes: Trematoda and trematodes auctorum ?"black spot disease" of Golder et al., 1983 |
|
Location: stomach, intestine, liver; muscles, body cavity, swimbladder, gills Hosts: Channa marulius (1)
Dist.: Chittagong, Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: 1. Ali 1968 (-)[26]; 2. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 3. Anon. 1974 (Chittagong), 4. 1993 (-)[27]; 5. Ali et al. 1983 (Dhaka); 6. Golder et al. 1983[28] (Chittagong); 7. Rashid and Haque 1984b (Dhaka); 8. Chandra 1992a (Dhaka), 9. 1994b (Dhaka)[29]; 10. Ahmed 1996 (-) |
|
CLASS MONOGENEA
SUBCLASS POLYONCHOINEA
ORDER DACTYLOGYRIDEA
SUBORDER DACTYLOGYRINEA
FAMILY DACTYLOGYRIDAE
Dactylogyrus glossogobii Jain, 1960 |
(F) |
Location: gills Host: Glossogobius giuris Dist.: Dhaka?, Sylhet? Records: Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Ahmed 1981 (-) |
|
Dactylogyrus vastator Nybelin, 1924[30] |
(F) |
Location: gills Hosts: Clarias batrachus (1) fish (2) Dist.: Bangladesh Records: 1. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-); 2. Banu et al. 1999 (-) Remarks: Gibson et al. (1996) indicated that this species is a parasite of cyprinid fishes of the Palearctic and Nearctic regions. The above records are thus probably based on misidentifications. |
|
Dactylogyrus sp. |
(F) |
Location: gills, skin Hosts: Anabas testudineus (4)
Dist.: Chittagong, Dhaka, Rajshahi Records: 1. Sanaullah and Ahmed 1980 (-); 2. Hossain and Khan 1992 (-); 3. Anon. 1992 (-), 4. 1993 (Chittagong, Rajshahi); 5. Hossain 1993 (-); 6. Banu et al. 1993 (Dhaka) |
|
SUBCLASS OLIGONCHOINEA
ORDER MAZOCRAEIDEA
SUBORDER MAZOCRAEINEA
FAMILY MAZOCRAEIDAE
Pseudoanthocotyle pavlovskyi Bykhovsky and Nagibina, 1954 |
(M) |
|
|
Syn.: Pseudoanthocotyle jagannath (Tripathi, 1959) |
|
Location: gills Host: Rastrelliger kanagurta Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Bashirullah 1973a Remarks: The synonymy follows Mamaev (1982). |
|
SUBORDER GASTROCOTYLINEA
SUPERFAMILY GASTEROCOTYLOIDEA
FAMILY GASTEROCOTYLIDAE
Pricea multae Chauhan, 1945 |
(M) |
|
|
Syn.: Pricea armata Ramalingam, 1952 P. robusta Ramalingam, 1952 |
|
Location: gills Host: Scomberomorus guttatus Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Bashirullah 1973a Remarks: The synonymy follows Nagibina (1969) and Rohde (1976). A discussion of the host and geographical distribution, and a revised synonymy is provided by Rohde and Hayward (1999). |
|
SUBORDER MICROCOTYLINEA
SUPERFAMILY MICROCOTYLOIDEA
FAMILY AXINIDAE
Megamicrocotyle chirocentrus Tripathi, 1956 |
(M) |
Location: gills Host: Chirocentrus dorab Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Bashirullah 1973a |
|
SUPERFAMILY DYCLIDOPHOROIDEA
FAMILY DICLYDOPHORIDAE
Choricotyle pagelli (Gallien, 1937) Llewellyn, 1941 |
(M) |
Location: gills Host: Ilisha filigera Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Bashirullah 1973a Remarks: As this monogenean was originally described from a sea bream collected in the North Atlantic Ocean off Ireland (see Dawes 1947), its report from a fish from Bangladesh is suspect. |
|
Choricotyle sp. |
(M) |
Location: gills Host: Ilisha filigera Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Bashirullah 1973a |
|
Unidentified Monogenea
Monogenea gen. sp. |
(F) |
|
|
Includes: monogeneans auctorum |
|
Location: gills, skin Hosts: Puntius sophore (1) Puntius sp. (2) Dist.: Bangladesh Records: 1. Anon. 1974 (-), 2. 1993[31] (-) |
|
CLASS CESTODA
SUBCLASS GYROCOTYLIDEA
ORDER GYROCOTYLIDEA
FAMILY GYROCOTYLIDAE
Gyrocotyle sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Clarias batrachus Dist.: Bangladesh Records: Ali 1968; Anon. 1974 (-) Remarks: Gyrocotylideans are primitive monozoic cestodes parasitic in the spiral valves of holocephalan fishes (see Gibson 1994). These records undoubtedly involve misidentications, most probably of caryophyllidean cestodes, which are common in walking catfish in Bangladesh. |
|
SUBCLASS CESTOIDEA
SUPERORDER EUCESTODA
ORDER CARYOPHYLLIDEA[32]
FAMILY LYTOCESTIDAE
Bovienia serialis (Bovien, 1926) Fuhrmann, 1931 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Clarias batrachus Dist.: Barisal, Dhaka Records: Ahmed 1981 (Barisal, Dhaka); Ahmed et al. 1984 (Barisal, Dhaka), 1985 (Dhaka); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
Bovienia sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Clarias batrachus Dist.: Dhaka, Rajshahi Records: Ahmed and Sanaullah 1976 (-)[33], 1977a (Rajshahi); Sanaullah and Ahmed 1978 (Dhaka, Rajshahi) |
|
Djombangia penetrans Bovien, 1926 |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine Host: Clarias batrachus Dist.: Barisal, Chittagong, Dhaka, Rajshahi, Sylhet Records: Ahmed and Sanaullah 1976 (-)[34], 1977a (Chittagong, Dhaka, Rajshahi, Sylhet), 1977b (-)[35], 1979 (-); Sanaullah and Ahmed 1978 (Dhaka, Chittagong, Rajshahi, Sylhet)[36]; Ahmed 1981 (Barisal, Dhaka); Rashid et al. 1983 (Dhaka), 1985 (Dhaka); Rashid and Haque 1984a (Dhaka); Ahmed et al. 1984 (Barisal, Chittagong, Dhaka, Sylhet), 1985 (Dhaka); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: The pathology caused by this cestode in Clarias batrachus has been described by Ahmed and Sanaullah (1979). |
|
Lytocestus birmanicus Lynsdale, 1956 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Clarias batrachus Dist.: Barisal, Dhaka Records: Ahmed 1981 (Barisal); Ahmed et al. 1984 (Dhaka), 1985 (Dhaka); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
Lytocestus indicus (Moghe, 1925) Woodland, 1926 |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine Host: Clarias batrachus Dist.: Barisal, Chittangong, Dhaka, Rajshahi, Sylhet Records: Ahmed and Sanaullah 1976 (-)[37], 1977a (Chittagong, Dhaka, Rajshahi, Sylhet), 1977b (-)[38], 1979 (-); Sanaullah and Ahmed 1978 (-)[39]; Ahmed 1981 (Barisal, Dhaka); Rashid et al. 1983 (Dhaka), 1985 (Dhaka); Rashid and Haque 1984a (Dhaka); Ahmed et al. 1984 (Barisal, Chittagong, Dhaka, Sylhet), 1985 (Dhaka); Chandra et al.1997 (Dhaka); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: The pathology caused by this cestode in Clarias batrachus has been described by Ahmed and Sanaullah (1979). |
|
Lytocestus lativitellarium Furtado and Tan, 1973 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Clarias batrachus Dist.: Bangladesh Record: Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
Lytocestus parvulus Furtado, 1963 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Clarias batrachus Dist.: Barisal, Chittagong, Dhaka, Rajshahi, Sylhet Records: Ahmed and Sanaullah 1976 (-)[40], 1977a (Dhaka, Rajshahi), 1977b (-)[41], 1979 (-); Sanaullah and Ahmed 1978 (-)[42]; Ahmed 1981 (Barisal, Dhaka); Rashid et al. 1983 (Dhaka), 1985 (Dhaka); Rashid and Haque 1984a (Dhaka); Ahmed et al. 1984 (Barisal, Chittagong, Dhaka, Sylhet), 1985 (Dhaka); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: The pathology caused by this cestode in Clarias batrachus has been described by Ahmed and Sanaullah (1979). |
|
Lytocestus sp. |
(F) |
Syn.: Lucknowia sp. Location: intestine Hosts: Clarias batrachus (1,2) Heteropneustes fossilis (3,5,6,7) Dist.: Barisal, Dhaka Records: 1. Ali 1968 (-); 2. Anon. 1974 (-); 3. Ahmed 1981 (Dhaka), 4. 1996 (-); 5. Ahmed et al. 1984 (Barisal), 6. 1985 (Dhaka); 7. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: The synonymy follows Mackiewicz (1994). |
|
Monobothrioides sp. |
(F) |
Location: [intestine] Host: Clarias batrachus Dist.: Dhaka Records: Rashid et al. 1983 (Dhaka), 1985 (Dhaka); Rashid and Haque 1984a (Dhaka) Remarks: As Mackiewicz (1994) noted that members of this genus are parasites of Bagridae and Clariidae in Africa, the above records are considered to involve misidentifications (J.S. Mackiewicz, pers. comm.). |
|
FAMILY CARYOPHYLLAEIDAE
Bialovarium sp. |
(F) |
Location: [intestine] Host: Heteropneustes fossilis Dist.: Dhaka Record: Amin et al. 1982 Remarks: Mackiewicz (1994) noted that members of this genus are parasites of cyprinid fishes in North America; the above report is thus regarded as a misidentification (J.S. Mackiewicz, pers. comm.). |
|
Caryophyllaeus sp. |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine Hosts: Clupisoma garua
Dist.: Dhaka Record: Chandra 1993b Remarks: Members of the genus Caryophyllaeus appear to be restricted to cyprinid fishes in the Palearctic Region (see Mackiewicz 1983, 1994). Reports of this genus from fishes of Bangladesh are considered to be misidentifications (J.S. Mackiewicz, pers. comm.). |
|
FAMILY CAPINGENTIDAE
Capingentoides batrachii Gupta, 1961 species inquirenda |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Clarias batrachus Dist.: Chittagong, Dhaka, Sylhet Records: Ahmed 1981 (Dhaka); Ahmed et al. 1984 (Chittagong, Dhaka, Sylhet), 1985 (Dhaka); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: Mackiewicz (1994) considered the genus Capingentoides Gupta, 1961 a synonym of Pseudocaryophyllaeus Gupta, 1961. He also noted that the musculature of P. indica Gupta, 1961 and C. batrachii Gupta, 1961 appears to be that of the family Caryophyllaeidae and that these two species may be conspecific. He also observed that the original description of C. batrachii was likely based on a mixed infection. For these reasons, we have listed this taxon as a species inquirenda. |
|
Pseudocaryophyllaeus heteropneustus Chandra and Khatun, 1993 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Heteropneustes fossilis Dist.: Dhaka Record: Chandra and Khatun 1993 |
|
Pseudocaryophyllaeus indica Gupta, 1961 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Clarias batrachus Dist.: Barisal, Dhaka Records: Ahmed 1981 (Barisal, Dhaka); Ahmed et al. 1984 (Barisal, Dhaka), 1985 (Dhaka); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: Mackiewicz (1994) noted that the musculature of Pseudocaryophyllaeus indica Gupta, 1961 and Capingentoides batrachii Gupta, 1961 appears to be that of the family Caryophyllaeidae and that these two species may be conspecific. |
|
Pseudocaryophyllaeus sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Heteropneustes fossilis Dist.: Dhaka Records: Chandra 1993b (Dhaka), 1994a (Dhaka) |
|
Pseudolytocestus clariae Gupta, 1961
|
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Clarias batrachus Dist.: Barisal, Chittagong, Dhaka, Sylhet Records: Anon. 1974 (-); Ahmed et al. 1984 (Barisal, Chittagong, Dhaka, Sylhet), 1985 (Dhaka); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: Mackiewicz (1981) regarded the status of this species as uncertain. The other member of the genus, Pseudolytocestus differtus Hunter, 1927 is a parasite of a North American catostomid fish (see Wardle and McLeod 1952). |
|
Unidentified Caryophyllaeidea
Caryophyllaeidea gen. sp.
|
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine Hosts: Clarias batrachus (6)
Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Chandra 1992a (Dhaka), 2. 1994b (Dhaka)[45]; 3. Akhtar et al. 1992 (Dhaka); 4. Khanum and Begum 1992 (Dhaka); 5. Khanum et al. 1996 (Dhaka); 6. Ahmed 1996 (-); 7. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
ORDER TRYPANORHYNCHA
SUPERFAMILY HOMEACANTHOIDEA
FAMILY TENTACULARIIDAE
Nybelinia sp. [postlarva] |
(M) |
Location: body cavity Host: Chirocentrus dorab Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: D'Silva and Khatoon 1997 |
|
SUPERFAMILY OTOBOTHRIOIDEA
FAMILY OTOBOTHRIIDAE
Poecilancistrum ilisha (Southwell and Prashad, 1918) Dollfus, 1929 plerocercus |
(M) |
Location: musculature Host: Tenualosa ilisha Dist.: Khulna Records: Southwell and Prashad 1918a (Khulna)[46]; 1918b (Khulna?)[47]; Southwell 1929 (Khulna), 1930 (-)[48] Remarks: This systematic position of this species is uncertain. Dollfus (1942) noted that Poecilancistrum ilisha was probably a synonym of P. gangeticum (Shipley and Hornell, 1906) and that both names may be synonyms of P. caryophyllum Diesing, 1850. Goldstein (1963), however, suggested that P. ilisha should be returned to the genus Otobothrium Linton, 1890. |
|
Poecilancistrum ilisha (Southwell and Prashad, 1918) Dollfus, 1929 |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Glyphis gangeticus Dist.: Khulna Records: Southwell and Prashad 1918a (Khulna)[49]; Southwell 1929 (Khulna), 1930 (-)[50] Remarks: The systematic postion of this species is uncertain. Dollfus (1942) noted that Poecilancistrum ilisha was probably a synonym of P. gangeticum (Shipley and Hornell, 1906) and that both names may be synonyms of P. caryophyllum Diesing, 1850. Goldstein (1963), however, suggested that P. ilisha should be returned to the genus Otobothrium Linton, 1890. |
|
FAMILY PTEROBOTHRIIDAE
Pterobothrium acanthotruncatum Escalante and Carvajal, 1984 plerocercus |
(M) |
Location: musculature Host: Arius gagora Dist.: Khula?[51] Records: Southwell 1929, 1930 Remarks: Campbell and Beveridge (1996) re-examined Southwell's specimens from Arius gagora, transferring them to P. acanthotruncatum. |
|
Pterobothrium heteracanthum Diesing, 1850 plerocercus |
(M) |
Syn.: Syndesmobothrium filicolle Linton, 1890 Location: musculature Host: Tenualosa ilisha Dist.: Khula?[52] Record: Southwell and Prashad 1918b Remarks: The synonymy follows Dollfus (1942); however, is is possible that this record from hilsa involves Pterobothrium acanthotruncatum Escalante and Carvajal, 1984 (I. Beveridge pers. comm.). |
|
Pterobothrium lintoni (MacCallum, 1916) Dollfus, 1942 plerocercus |
(M) |
Syn.: Gymnorhynchus malleus (Linton, 1924) Location: body cavity, viscera, muscle Host: Lates calcarifer Dist.: Chittagong?[53] Records: Chandra 1992a, 1993b Remarks: The synonymy follows Campbell and Beveridge (1996). |
|
SUPERFAMILY POECILACANTHOIDEA
FAMILY DASYRHYNCHIDAE
Dasyrhynchus indicus Chandra and Rao, 1986 plerocercus species inquirenda |
(M) |
Location: body cavity, viscera, muscle Host: Lates calcarifer Dist.: Chittagong?[54] Records: Chandra 1992a, 1993b Remarks: In their revision of the genus Dasyrhynchus Pintner, 1928, Beveridge and Campbell (1993) noted that Dasyrhynchus indicus resembles D. magnus (Bilquees and Kurshid, 1985), but that the original description is too poor to be certain of their synonymy. We follow these authors in listing this taxon as a species inquirenda. |
|
FAMILY GYMNORHYNCHIDAE
Gymnorhynchus gigas (Cuvier, 1817)
|
(M) |
Location: body cavity, viscera, muscle Host: Lates calcarifer Dist.: Chittagong?[55] Records: Chandra 1992a, 1993b Remarks: As other records of Gymnorhynchus gigas from Indian coastal waters of the Bay of Bengal given by Chandra (1985b) clearly pertain to Pterobothrium (I. Beveridge, per. comm.), this record from Bangladesh may involve Pterobothrium acanthotruncatum Escalante and Carvajal, 1984. |
|
Gymnorhynchus sp. plerocercus |
(M) |
Location: body cavity, viscera Hosts: Otolithoides pama (1,2,3)
Dist.: Chittagong Records: 1. Ali 1968 (-); 2. Rahman 1971 (Chittagong); 3. Anon. 1974 (Chittagong) |
|
FAMILY LACISTORHYNCHIDAE
Callitetrarhynchus gracilis (Rudolphi, 1819) Pintner, 1931 plerocercus[56] |
(M) |
Location: body cavity, viscera, muscle Host: Lates calcarifer Dist.: Chittagong?[57] Records: Chandra 1992a, 1993b |
|
Unidentified Trypanorhyncha
Tetrarhynchus sp. |
(M) |
Location: muscle, ovary Host: Glossogobius giuris Dist.: Bangladesh Records: Ali 1968 (-); Anon. 1974 (-) Remarks: Jones et al. (1994) listed Tetrarhynchus Rudolphi, 1890 as a genus incertae sedis. |
|
Trypanorhyncha gen. sp. |
(M) |
Location: not specified Host: elasmobranch fishes Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Khusi et al. 1993 |
|
ORDER TETRAPHYLLIDEA
FAMILY DISCULICIPITIDAE
Disculiceps pileatum (Linton, 1890) Joyeux and Baer, 1936 |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Glyphis gangeticus Dist.: Khulna Record: Southwell and Prashad 1918a[58] |
|
Unidentified Tetraphyllidea
Tetraphyllidea gen. sp. |
(M) |
Location: not specified Host: elasmobranch fishes Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Khusi et al. 1993 |
|
ORDER LECANICEPHALIDEA
Lecanicephalidea gen. sp. |
(M) |
Location: not specified Host: elasmobranch fishes Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Khusi et al. 1993 |
|
ORDER PSEUDOPHYLLIDEA
FAMILY BOTHRIOCEPHALIDAE
Bothriocephalus cuspidatus Cooper, 1917 |
(F) |
Location: [pyloric caeca, intestine] Hosts: Channa marulius C. striata Dist.: Bangladesh Record: Khanum et al. 1993 Remarks: The report of this North American species from Bangladesh is probably based on a misidentification. |
|
Bothriocephalus sp. plerocercoid |
(F) |
Location: viscera, gall bladder Host: Nandus nandus Dist.: Chittagong, Dhaka Records: Chandra and Golder 1987 (Chittagong); Golder et al. 1987 (Chittagong); Nahida et al. 1994 (Dhaka) Remarks: Golder et al. (1987) noted that most of their specimens were "encysted." |
|
Polyonchobothrium sp. |
(F) |
Location: not specified Hosts: Channa marulius C. striata Dist.: Bangladesh Record: Khanum et al. 1993 |
|
Senga ophicephaliana (Tseng, 1933) Dollfus, 1934[59] |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Nandus nandus Dist.: Chittagong Records: Chandra and Golder 1987 (Chittagong); Golder et al. 1987 (Chittagong) |
|
Taphrobothrium japonense Lühe, 1899 |
(M) |
Location: [intestine] Hosts: Channa marulius C. striata Dist.: Bangladesh Record: Khanum et al. 1993 Remarks: Originally described from a marine fish (Muraenesox cinereus) of Japan (see Wardle and McLeod 1952), the occurrence of this species in freshwater fishes of Bangladesh is unlikely. |
|
FAMILY TRIAENOPHORIDAE
Anchistrocephalus sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine, liver Hosts: Channa marulius (1,2)
Dist.: Chittagong Records: 1. Ali 1968 (-); 2. Anon. 1974 (Chittagong) Remarks: The synonymy follows Bray et al. (1994). As the only member of this genus, Anchistrocephalus microcephalus Rudolphi, 1819, is a parasite of the ocean sunfish (Mola mola) (see Wardle and McLeod 1952), these records from freshwater fishes of Bangladesh probably involve misidentifications. |
|
Marsipometra parva Simer, 1930 |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine Host: Mastacembelus armatus Dist: Bangladesh Record: Khanum and Parveen 1997 Remarks: This species was originally described from Polyodon spathula from the southern United States (see Hoffman 1998); its occurrence in Bangadesh seems improbable. |
|
FAMILY DIPHYLLOBOTHRIIDAE
Diphyllobothrium latum (Linnaeus, 1758) Lühe, 1910 plerocercoid |
(F) |
Location: mucles Host: Harpadon nehereus Dist.: Chittagong Record: Uddin et al. 1980 Remarks: Diphyllobothrium latum is a parasite of coldwater freshwater fishes of North America and Europe (see Hoffman 1998). The above report from Bangladesh is considered to involve a misidentification. |
|
Ligula intestinalis (Linnaeus, 1758) Gmelin, 1790 plerocercoid |
(F) |
Location: [body cavity] Host: Heteropneustes fossilis Dist.: Dhaka Record: Amin et al. 1982 Remarks: Bray et al. (1994) noted that the distribution of this species is circumboreal; its occurrence in fishes of Bangadesh therefore requires confirmation. |
|
Unidentified Diphyllobothriidae
Diphyllobothriidae gen. sp. Plerocercoid
|
(F) |
Location: body cavity, viscera, intestine Hosts: Nandus nandus (1) Tenualosa ilisha (2,3) Dist.: Chittagong, Dhaka Records: Chowdhury et al. 1982 (Dhaka); 2. Zaman et al. 1992b (Chittagong), 3. 1994 (Chittagong) |
|
Unidentified Pseudophyllidea
Pseudophyllidea gen. sp.
|
(F,M) |
Location: stomach, intestine Hosts: Glossogobius giuris (1,2) elasmobranch fishes (3) Dist.: Dhaka, Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Khanum et al. 1992 (-), 2. 1994 (Dhaka); 3. Khusi et al. 1993 (Bay of Bengal) Remarks: As pseudophyllideans do not infect elasmobranchs, the record of Khusi et al. (1993) is either based on a misidentification or is the result of pseudoparasitism due a shark or ray feeding on a teleost fish. |
|
Unidentified Cestoda
Ilisha parthenogenetica Southwell and Prashad, 1918 plerocercoid |
(M?) |
Location: pyloric caeca, mesenteries, liver Host: Tenualosa ilisha Dist.: Chittagong, Khulna Records: Southwell and Prashad 1918a (Khulna); Southwell 1930 (Khulna)[61]; Zaman et al. 1992b (Chittagong), 1994 (Chittagong) Remarks: According to Jones et al. (1994), the genus Ilisha Southwell and Prashad, 1918 is a collective larval genus that is preoccupied; therefore, it should not be applied to cestodes. |
|
Cestoda gen. sp. plerocercoid and/or adult
|
(F) |
Location: intestine, body cavity Hosts: Channa marulius (1,2)
Dist.: Chittagong, Dhaka, Rajshahi Records: 1. Ali 1968 (-); 2. Anon. 1974 (Chittagong), 3. 1993 (Rajshahi); 4. Hassan et al. 1982 (Dhaka); 5. Rashid and Haque 1984b (Dhaka); 6. Sultana et al. 1992 (Dhaka) |
|
PHYLUM NEMATODA[62]
CLASS ADENOPHOREA
ORDER ENOPLIDA
SUPERFAMILY DIOCTOPHYMATOIDEA
FAMILY DIOCTOPHYMATIDAE
Eustrongylides tubifex (Nitzsch in Rudolphi, 1819) Jägerskiöld, 1909 larva |
(F) |
Location: ovary, mesenteries Host: Ompok bimaculatus Dist.: Dhaka Records: Khanum et al. 1996 (Dhaka); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: The life cycle of this nematode involves maturation in fish-eating birds (Gaviiformes, Anseriformes, Ciconiiformes and Podicipediformes). Aquatic oligochaetes serve as first intermediate hosts, while fish are believed to act as second intermediate or paratenic hosts (see Moravec 1998). Moravec (1998) cautioned that the only reliable means of determining the specific identity of larval Eustrongylides is to examine adult specimens obtained through experimental infection of birds. Further, as Measures (1988), in her revision of the genus, stated that E. tubifex is found only in the Holarctic and Neotropical regions, the above report is regarded as a probable misidentification. |
|
Eustrongylides sp. [larva?] |
(F) |
Host: Ompok pabda Location: intestine [?] Dist.: Dhaka Record: Chandra 1993b Remarks: The above record from the intestine of a freshwater fish requires confirmation. The location may have been incorrectly determined, or the parasite may have been misidentified. |
|
SUPERFAMILY TRICHINELLOIDEA
FAMILY CAPILLARIIDAE
Capillaria sp. |
(F,M) |
Location: esophagus, stomach, intestine Hosts: Glossogobius giuris (4,5)
Dist.: Dhaka, Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Bay of Bengal); 2. Ahmed and Rahman 1976 (Bay of Bengal), 3. 1977 (Bay of Bengal); 4. Khanum et al. 1992 (-), 5. 1994 (Dhaka), 6. 1996 (Dhaka); 7. Khanum and Parveen 1997 (-); 8. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: As a large number of genera belonging to the Capillariidae are now recognized to infect fishes (see Moravec 1998), the generic assignment of nematodes reported as "Capillaria" from fishes of Bangladesh must be re-examined. |
|
CLASS SECERNENTEA
ORDER OXYURIDA
SUPERFAMILY OXYUROIDEA
FAMILY PHARYNGODONIDAE
Cosmoxynemoides sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Colisa fasciatus Dist.: Dhaka?, Sylhet? Records: Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Ahmed 1981 (-) Remarks: Petter and Quentin (1976) noted that the genus Cosmoxynemoides Travassos, 1949 was of doubtful status because males were unknown. However, Moravec (1998), in his review of the nematode fauna of Neotropical freshwater fishes, accepted the validity of this genus and species. Moravec (1998) also noted that the genus contains a single species, C. aguirrei Travassos, 1949, so far known only from South America. |
|
ORDER ASCARIDIDA
SUPERFAMILY HETERAKOIDEA
FAMILY ASCARIDIIDAE
Ascaridia sp. adult and larva[63] |
(F) |
Location: digestive tract, viscera, body cavity Hosts: Channa punctata (2,4)
Dist.: Chittagong, Dhaka, Sylhet Records: 1. Islam 1982 (Sylhet); 2. Hossain et al. 1982 (Dhaka); 3. Rashid et al. 1983 (Dhaka); 4. Huq et al. 1983 (Dhaka); 5. Rashid and Haque 1984a (Dhaka); 6. Chandra and Golder 1987 (Chittagong); 7. Golder et al. 1987 (Chittagong); 8. Rashid 1990 (Dhaka); 9. Chandra 1994a (Dhaka) Remarks: Members of the genus Ascaridia Dujardin, 1845 are parasites of birds and, rarely, mammals (see Chabaud 1978). Some of the above records may involve misidentification of ascaridoid nematodes, as the adults and/or larvae of a number of genera of this superfamily (e.g., Anisakis, Contracaecum, Hysterothylacium, Pseudoterranova, Raphidascaris) are frequently encountered parasites of fishes. |
|
SUPERFAMILY ASCARIDOIDEA
FAMILY ANISAKIDAE
Goezia ascaroides (Goeze, 1782) Railliet and Henry, 1915 |
(M) |
Location: stomach Host: Thryssa hamiltonii Dist.: Khulna Record: Khan and Yaseen 1969 Remarks: As Goezia ascaroides is a poorly known parasite of European freshwater fishes (see Deardorff and Overstreet 1980), the above record from a marine fish of Bangladesh is likely to be based on a misidentification. A description was provided by Khan and Yaseen (1969). |
|
Goezia sp.[64] |
(F,M) |
Location: intestine, body cavity Hosts: Lutjanus argentimaculatus (2)
Dist.: Dhaka?, Sylhet?, Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Ali 1968 (-); 2. Bashirullah 1973a (Bay of Bengal, Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 3. Anon. 1974 (-); 4. Ahmed 1981 (-); 5. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
Contracaecum aori Khan and Yaseen, 1969 larva species inquirenda |
(F) |
Location: body cavity Host: Sperata aor Dist.: Sylhet Record: Khan and Yaseen 1969 Remarks: The description of this nematode by Khan and Yaseen (1969) was based on three female specimens. Deardorff and Overstreet (1981) listed Contracaecum aori among those larval ascaridoids of uncertain status. They further noted that it was probably a fourth-stage larva. Moravec (1998) noted that since the separation of species is based on adult morphology, it is generally impossible to assign larval Contracaecum to species with certainty without carrying out feeding experiments. |
|
Contracaecum brevicaecum Khan and Yaseen, 1969 larva species inquirenda |
(?)[65] |
Location: body cavity Host: sawfish Dist.: Khulna Record: Khan and Yaseen 1969 Remarks: The description of this species by Khan and Yaseen (1969) was based on female specimens only. Deardorff and Overstreet (1981) listed Contracaecum brevicaecum among those larval ascaridoids of uncertain status. They further noted that it was a third-stage larva. Moravec (1998) noted that since the separation of species is based on adult morphology, it is generally impossible to assign larval Contracaecum to species with certainty without carrying out feeding experiments. |
|
Contracaecum sp. larva |
(F,M) |
Location: stomach, pyloric caeca, intestine, body cavity, viscera Hosts: Anabas testudineus (7)
Dist.: Chittagong, Dhaka, Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Ali 1968 (-); 2. Bashirullah 1973a (Bay of Bengal); 3. Anon. 1974 (Chittagong); 4. Chowdhury et al. 1983 (Dhaka); 5. Ahmed et al. 1986 (Bay of Bengal); 6. Khanum et al. 1996 (Dhaka); 7. Akther et al. 1997 (Dhaka); 8. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: Members of the genus Contracaecum occur as adults in the digestive tract of fish-eating birds and marine mammals, while fish may serve as either intermediate or paratenic hosts (see Moravec 1998). |
|
(M) |
|
Location: liver, stomach wall, stomach Hosts: Cynoglossus arel (2,3,4) Ilisha filigera (1) Dist.: Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Bay of Bengal); 2. Ahmed and Rahman 1976 (Bay of Bengal), 3. 1977 (Bay of Bengal), 4. 1979 (Bay of Bengal) |
|
Paranisakis sp. larva |
(M) |
Location: body cavity, viscera Host: Dussumieria acuta Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Ahmed et al. 1986 |
|
Raphidascaris panijii Khan and Yaseen, 1969 species inquirenda |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Sillaginopsis panijus Dist.: Khulna Record: Khan and Yaseen 1969 Remarks: Soota (1983) noted that Raphidascaris panijii was inadequately described based on a single male specimen. He also pointed out that the authors' figure of the tail of the adult male appears to be that of a juvenile female. |
|
Raphidascaris sp. larva |
(M) |
Location: intestine, body cavity, wall of stomach and intestine Hosts: Polynemus paradiseus (4)
Dist.: Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Ahmed and Rahman 1976 (Bay of Bengal), 2. 1977 (Bay of Bengal), 3. 1979 (Bay of Bengal); 4. Ahmed et al. 1986 (Bay of Bengal) |
|
Terranova sp. |
(M) |
Location: stomach Host: Eusphyra blochii Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Bashirullah 1973a |
|
FAMILY ACANTHOCHEILIDAE
Pseudanisakis sp. |
(M) |
Location: stomach Host: Eusphyra blochii Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Bashirullah 1973a Remarks: The synonymy follows Gibson (1973). As Gibson (1973) noted that Pseudanisakis spp. appear to be primarily parasites of skates and rays, the above report from a winghead shark is possibly based on a misidentification. He also speculated that the life cycle of members of this genus may involve one or two crustacean and no teleost intermediate hosts. |
|
FAMILY ASCARIDIDAE
Ascaris sp. |
(F) |
Location: stomach Host: Channa punctata Dist.: Dhaka Records: Hossain et al. 1982 (Dhaka); Huq et al. 1983 (Dhaka) Remarks: As members of the genus Ascaris are parasites of mammals (see Hartwich 1974), the above records must involve misidentifications of other ascaridoid nematodes. |
|
Dujardinascaris sp. larva |
(M) |
Location: liver, stomach wall Host: Cynoglossus arel Dist.: Bay of Bengal Records: Ahmed and Rahman 1976 (Bay of Bengal), 1977 (Bay of Bengal), 1979 (Bay of Bengal) Remarks: Members of the genus Dujardinascaris are parasites of crocodilians (see Hartwich 1974). |
|
Porrocaecum trichiuri Chandler, 1935 species inquirenda [larva?] |
(M) |
Location: body cavity Hosts: Polydactylus indicus (1) Psettodes erumei (2,3) Dist.: Khulna, Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Khan and Yaseen 1969 (Khulna); 2. Ahmed and Rahman 1976 (Bay of Bengal), 3. 1977 (Bay of Bengal) Remarks: Soota (1983) listed this taxon as a species inquirenda. He noted that the figure of the tail of the adult male given by Khan and Yaseen (1969) appears to be that of a juvenile female. The finding of this parasite within the body cavity of the host would also indicate that the specimens of Khan and Yaseen (1969) were probably larvae. |
|
Porrocaecum sp. Larva |
(F) |
Location: external wall of intestine Host: Nandus nandus Dist.: Dhaka Record: Nahida et al. 1994 Remarks: Adults of members of this genus are intestinal parasites of birds, while larvae of some species occur in fishes (see Moravec 1998). |
|
Unidentified Ascaridoidea
Ascaridoidea gen. sp. Larva |
(F) |
Includes: Ascaroid larva auctorum Ascaridoid larva auctorum Location: stomach, intestine, liver, body cavity Hosts: Glossogobius giuris (5,6)
Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Akhtar et al. 1989 (Dhaka)[68], 2. 1990 (Dhaka), 3. 1992 (Dhaka); 4. Khanum and Begum 1992 (Dhaka); 5. Khanum et al. 1992 (-), 6. 1994 (Dhaka) |
|
SUPERFAMILY COSMOCERCOIDEA
FAMILY KATHLANIIDAE
Falcaustra brevicaudatum (Khan and Yaseen, 1969) Soota, 1983 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Ompok bimaculatus Dist.: Sylhet Records: Khan and Yaseen 1969 (Sylhet); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
SUPERFAMILY SEURATOIDEA
FAMILY CUCULLANIDAE
Cucullanus dogieli Krotas, 1959 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Chanda nama Dist.: Sylhet Record: Khan and Yaseen 1969 Remarks: This species was originally described from a cyprinoid fish from the USSR (see Soota 1983) and has been reported from a wide variety of cyprinid fishes from the basins of the Baltic, Black and Azov seas (see Bauer 1987). |
|
Cucullanus pangasius Soota and Chaturvedi, 1971 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Pangasius pangasius Dist.: Bangladesh Record: Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: Soota (1983) noted the close similarity of this species to Cucullanus ritai Karve, 1952 and suggested that they may be conspecific. |
|
Cucullanus sp. |
(F,M) |
Location: stomach, intestine, body cavity Hosts: Mystus cavasius (1,5,6)
Dist.: Dhaka?, Sylhet?, Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 2. Ahmed and Rahman 1976 (Bay of Bengal), 3. 1977 (Bay of Bengal), 4. 1979 (Bay of Bengal)[69]; 5. Ahmed 1981 (-); 6. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: Although Ahmed and Rahman (1977) reported larval Cucullanus sp. From the stomach of Psettodes erumei, it is probable that these were actually immature adults.
|
|
Dichelyne (Cucullanellus) sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Rita rita (1,2) fish (3) Dist.: Dhaka?, Sylhet Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 2. Ahmed 1981 (-); 3. Islam 1982 (Sylhet) Remarks: The synonymy follows Chabaud (1978). |
|
FAMILY QUIMPERIIDAE
Buckleynema sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Mystus cavasius (1,4)
Dist.: Dhaka?, Sylhet Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 2. Ahmed 1981 (-); 3. Islam 1982 (Sylhet); 4. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
Paragendria bagarii (Karve, 1941) Soota, 1983 |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine, body cavity, swimbladder Host: Xenentodon cancila Dist: Dhaka Records: Akhtar et al. 1989 (Dhaka), 1990 (Dhaka) Remarks: Chaubaud (1978) regarded Metaquimperia Karve, 1941 as a synonym of Paragendria Baylis, 1939. |
|
Paragendria wallagonia (Sood, 1968) Sood, 1989 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Anabas testudineus Dist: Dhaka Record: Akther et al. 1997 Remarks: The synonymy follows Sood (1989). Soota (1983) considered Paragendria wallagonia a synonym of P. macronis (Stewart, 1914) and P. madhuai, a distinct species. |
|
Paragendria sp. |
(F) |
Host: Sperata aor Location: intestine Dist.: Dhaka Record: Chandra 1993b |
|
Paraquimperia sp. larva |
(M) |
Location: body cavity, outer wall of intestine Hosts: Cynoglossus arel (1,2) Polydactylus sextarius (3) Dist.: Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Ahmed and Rahman 1976 (Bay of Bengal), 2. 1977 (Bay of Bengal); 3. Ahmed et al. 1986 (Bay of Bengal) |
|
Pingus aori Khan and Yaseen, 1969
|
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Sperata aor Dist.: Sylhet Records: Khan and Yaseen 1969 (Sylhet); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: Soota (1983) noted that this is an inadequately described species. Dr. F. Moravec (pers. comm.) regards it as a species inquirenda. |
|
Quimperia sp. larva |
(M) |
Location: liver, body cavity Hosts: Sardinella fimbriata Upeneus sulphureus Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: Ahmed et al. 1986 |
|
Quimperiidae gen. sp. Larva |
(F,M) |
Location: body cavity, viscera, muscle, stomach, intestine Hosts: Channa marulius (8)
Dist.: Barisal, Chittagong, Dhaka, Rajshahi, Sylhet, Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Bay of Bengal); 2. Ahmed and Sanaullah 1976 (-)[70], 3. 1977a (Chittagong, Dhaka, Rajshahi, Sylhet), 4. 1977b (-)[71]; 5. Ahmed and Rahman 1976 (Bay of Bengal), 6. 1977 (Bay of Bengal), 7. 1979 (Bay of Bengal); 8. Ahmed and Begum 1978 (Barisal, Dhaka); 9. Sanaullah and Ahmed 1978 (-)[72]; 10. Islam et al. 1982 (Dhaka); 11. Rashid et al. 1983 (Dhaka); 12. Rashid and Haque 1984a (Dhaka); 13. Rashid 1990 (Dhaka); 14. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
Unidentified Ascaridida
Ascaridida gen. sp. larva |
(F,M) |
Includes: Ascarididean larva auctorum Ascaridian larva auctorum Location: stomach, intestine, body cavity, viscera Hosts: Aetobatus narinari (1)
Dist.: Chittagong, Dhaka, Sylhet?, Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Bay of Bengal, Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 2. Hossain et al. 1978 (Dhaka); 3. Ahmed 1981 (-); 4. Chowdhury et al. 1983 (Dhaka), 5. 1990 (Dhaka); 6. Hussain and Ali 1986 (Dhaka); 7. Chandra 1992a (Dhaka), 8. 1993b (Dhaka); 9. Akther et al. 1997 (Dhaka); 10. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: Members of the family Ascaridiidae (which contains a single genus, Ascaridia) are parasites of birds and, rarely, mammals (see Chabaud 1978). There exists considerable confusion among Bangladeshi workers concerning the use of the terms "ascarididean," "ascaridian" or "Ascaridia sp." and "ascaridoid" or "ascaroid." Some or all of the above records may involve misidentification of ascaridoid nematodes, as the adults and/or larvae of a number of genera of this superfamily (e.g., Anisakis, Contracaecum, Hysterothylacium, Pseudoterranova, Raphidascaris) are frequently encountered in marine and freshwater fishes. |
|
ORDER SPIRURIDA
SUPERFAMILY CAMALLANOIDEA
FAMILY CAMALLANIDAE[73]
Camallanus (Zeylanema) anabantis Pearse, 1933 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Anabas testudineus Dist.: Barisal, Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Ahmed and Begum 1978 (Barisal, Dhaka); Ahmed 1981 (-); Akther et al. 1997 (Dhaka) |
|
Camallanus atropusi Bashirullah and Khan, 1973 |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Atropus atropos Dist.: Bay of Bengal Records: Bashirullah and Khan 1973 (Bay of Bengal); Bashirullah 1973a (Bay of Bengal) Remarks: The status of this taxon requires further analysis. Considered a synonym of Camallanus trichiuris Bashirullah and Rahman, 1972 by Soota (1983), it was listed separately by Sood (1989). |
|
Camallanus bispiculus Rajyalakshmi, Rao and Shyamasundari, 1986 |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Chirocentrus dorab Dist.: Bay of Bengal Record: D'Silva and Khatoon 1997 Remarks: This species was redescribed by D'Silva and Khatoon (1997). |
|
Camallanus cotti Fujita, 1927 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Polydactylus indicus Dist.: Khulna Record: Khan and Yaseen 1969 Remarks: Moravec and Sey (1988) considered the above report, which was based on a single female nematode from the Indian threadfin, a marine species, to involve a misidentification. |
|
Camallanus dollfusi Bashirullah and Khan, 1973 |
(M) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Solea elongata (2) Trichiurus lepturus (1,2) Dist.: Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Bashirullah and Khan 1973 (Bay of Bengal); 2. Bashirullah 1973a (Bay of Bengal) Remarks: The status of this taxon requires further analysis. Considered a synonym of Camallanus trichiuris Bashirullah and Rahman, 1972 by Soota (1983), it was listed separately by Sood (1989). |
|
Camallanus intestinalus Bashirullah, 1974 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Channa punctata C. striata Dist.: Dhaka Record: Bashirullah 1974b |
|
Camallanus kirandensis Baylis, 1928 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: sawfish Dist.: Khulna Record: Khan and Yaseen 1969 Remarks: Given that this species was originally described from a freshwater cyprinid in Africa (see Sood 1989), this report is likely to involve a misidentification. A description, based on a single male and a single female specimen, was given by Khan and Yaseen (1969). |
|
Camallanus (Zeylanema) magna (Khan and Yaseen, 1969) Petter, 1979 |
(M?)[74] |
Syn.: Zeylanema magna Khan and Yaseen, 1969 Location: intestine Host: Macrognathus pancalus Dist.: Khulna Record: Khan and Yaseen 1969 |
|
Camallanus (Zeylanema) pearsei (Yeh, 1960) Agrawal, 1967 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Anabas testudineus (2,3,4,5) Channa gachua (1,2,4) Dist.: Barisal, Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: 1. Bashirullah 1970 (-), 2. 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 3. Ahmed and Begum 1978 (Barisal); 4. Ahmed 1981 (-); 5. Akther et al. 1997 (Dhaka) |
|
Camallanus trichiuris Bashirullah and Rahman, 1972 |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Lepturacanthus savala Dist.: Bay of Bengal Records: Bashirullah and Rahman 1972 (Bay of Bengal); Bashirullah 1973a (Bay of Bengal) Remarks: Soota (1983) considered Camallanus atropusi Bashirullah and Khan, 1973 and C. dollfusi Bashirullah and Khan, 1973 as synonyms of this species. |
|
Camallanus truncatus (Rudolphi, 1814) Törnquist, 1931 |
(M) |
Location: stomach, intestine, body cavity, intestinal surface Host: Mystus tengara Dist.: Dhaka Record: Chowdhury et al. 1990 Remarks: As Camallanus truncatus is a parasite of freshwater fishes of Europe, it is likely that this report from Bangladesh is based on a misidentification. |
|
Camallanus xenentodoni Khan and Yaseen, 1969 species inquirenda |
(F) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Macrognathus aculeatus Xenentodon cancila Dist.: Khulna, Sylhet Record: Khan and Yaseen 1969 Remarks: As the description is based on female specimens only, the status of this species is uncertain. |
|
Camallanus sp. adult and larva |
(F,M) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Channa marulius (1,2) Chirocentrus dorab (1) Dist.: Dhaka?, Sylhet?, Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Bay of Bengal, Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 2. Ahmed 1981 (-); 3. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
Neocamallanus ophicephali (Pearse, 1933) Moravec and Sey, 1988 |
(F) |
Location: pyloric caeca, intestine Hosts: Channa marulius (4) C. punctata (2,4,6) Dist.: Dhaka, Sylhet Records: 1. Khan and Yaseen 1969 (Sylhet); 2. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet), 3. 1974b (Dhaka); 4. Anon. 1974 (-); 5. Bashirullah and Ahmed 1976a (Dhaka); 6. Ahmed 1981 (-); 7. Rahman 1989 (-) Remarks: The life cycle, which involves a copepod intermediate host, was studied by Bashirullah and Ahmed (1976a) and by De et al. (1984) (as Camallanus adamsi and Neocamallanus singhi, respectively).
|
|
Neocamallanus vachaii Wahid and Perveen, 1969 |
(F) |
Syn.: Camallanus vachaii (Wahid and Perveen, 1969)[76] Host: Eutropiichthys vacha Location: intestine Dist.: Dhaka Record: Chandra 1993b |
|
Neocamallanus sp. |
(F) |
Location: pyloric caeca Hosts: Channa marilius (1,2)
Dist.: Bangladesh Records: 1. Ali 1968 (-); 2. Anon. 1974 (Chittagong) |
|
Paracamallanus sweeti (Moorthy, 1937) Campana-Rouget, 1961 |
(F) |
Location: esophagus, stomach, intestine, liver Hosts: Channa marulius (1)
Dist: Bangladesh Records: 1. Khanum et al. 1993 (-); 2. Khanum and Parveen 1997 (-) |
|
Procamallanus (Spirocamallanus) alii Kalyankar, 1971 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Ompok bimaculatus (2,3) Polydactylus indicus (1) Dist.: Dhaka, Khulna Records: 1. Khan and Yaseen 1969 (Khulna); 2. Khanum et al. 1996 (Dhaka); 3. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: Petter (1978) considered Spirocamallanus mazabukae sensu Khan and Yaseen, 1969 referable to S. alii. |
|
Procamallanus (Spirocamallanus) berdii (Khan and Yaseen, 1969) Bilqees, Khanum and Jehan, 1971 species inquirenda |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Acanthopagrus berda Dist.: Khulna Record: Khan and Yaseen 1969 Remarks: The taxonomic status of this species requires reassessment. Soota (1983) listed it as a synonym of Onchocamallanus bagarii (Karve and Naik, 1951) (syn. of Procamallanus (Spirocamallanus) bagarii), however, Sood (1989) considered the two species distinct. Dr. F. Moravec (pers. comm.) regards it as a species inquirenda. |
|
Procamallanus (Procamallanus) cancilus Bashirullah and Hafizuddin, 1974 species inquirenda[79] |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Xenentodon cancila Dist.: Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); Bashirullah and Hafizuddin 1974 (Dhaka); Ahmed 1981 (-) Remarks: As noted by Soota (1983), as the original description of this species was based only on female specimens, its status is uncertain. |
|
Procamallanus (Procamallanus) clarius Ali, 1957 |
(F) |
Syn.: Procamallanus heteropneustus Ali, 1957[80],[81] Spirocamallanus heteropneustus (Ali, 1957)[82] Location: stomach, intestine Hosts: Clarias batrachus (1,2,3,4,5,6,14) Heteropneustes fossilis (1,2,3,7,8,9,10, 11,12,14) Mastacembelus armatus (3) Ompok bimaculatus (13,14) O. pabda (13,14) Dist.: Chittagong, Dhaka Records: 1. Rahman and Ali 1968 (Chittagong)[83]; 2. Ali 1968 (-); 3. Anon. 1974 (Chittagong); 4. Rashid et al. 1983 (Dhaka); 5. Rashid and Haque 1984a (Dhaka); 6. Rashid 1990 (Dhaka); 7. Zaman et al. 1992a (Dhaka); 8. Chandra 1992a (Dhaka), 9. 1993a (Dhaka), 10. 1993b (Dhaka), 11. 1994a (Dhaka); 12. Chandra and Modak 1995 (Dhaka); 13. Khanum et al. 1996 (Dhaka); 14. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: Chandra and Modak (1995) established experimental infections in copepods, Diaptomus sp.
|
|
Procamallanus (Spirocamallanus) mysti Karve, 1952 |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine, liver [?] Hosts: Channa striata (1,2,8) Clarias batrachus (5,6,7) Dist.: Dhaka, Rajshahi, Sylhet Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet), 2. 1973b (Dhaka, Sylhet); 3. Bashirullah and Hafizuddin 1973 (Dhaka); 4. Bashirullah and Ahmed 1976b (Dhaka); 5. Ahmed and Sanaullah 1976 (-)[86], 6. 1977a (Dhaka, Rajshahi)[87]; 7. Sanaullah and Ahmed 1978 (Dhaka, Rajshahi)[88]; 8. Ahmed 1981 (-); 9. Islam et al. 1982 (Dhaka); 10. Chowdhury et al. 1990 (Dhaka); 11. Khanum et al. 1996 (Dhaka); 12. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: The synonymy follows De et al. (1986), who provided a redescription of this species. The life cycle was studied (under the synonym Spirocamallanus intestinecolas) by Bashirullah and Ahmed (1976b), who established experimental infections that developed to third-stage larvae in the copepods Mesocyclops leuckarti and Thermocyclops crassus by exposing them to first-stage larvae released from adult worms obtained from Mystus, and by De (1995) (under the synonym S. mysti), who sucessfully infected the fish Mystus vittatus via expermental transmission of third-stage larvae in experimentally infected copepods. Following De and Moravec (1980), Procamallanus viviparus of Khan and Yaseen, 1969 is tentatively referred to P. spiculogubernaculus Agarwal, 1958. |
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Procamallanus (Procamallanus) spiculogubernaculus Agarwal, 1958 |
(F) |
Syn.: Procamallanus daccai Gupta, 1959 P. sprenti Bashirullah and Hafizuddin, 1974 Location: stomach, intestine Hosts: Channa striata (3,5)
Dist.: Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: 1. Gupta 1959 (Dhaka); 2. Khan and Yaseen 1969 (Dhaka); 3. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 4. Bashirullah and Hafizuddin 1974 (Dhaka); 5. Ahmed 1981 (-); 6. Chowdhury et al. 1990 (Dhaka); 7. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: The synonymy follows De and Moravec (1980). Bashirullah (1973a) created a nomen nudum, Procamallanus bangladeshi Bashirullah, 1973, by reporting, without description, "Procamallanus bangladeshi Bashirullah & Hafizuddin, 1973" as a parasite of H. fossilis. The same material was later apparently described as P. sprenti by Bashirullah and Hafizuddin (1974) (see De and Moravec 1980). According to De and Moravec (1980), since the specimens reported as Procamallanus viviparus by Khan and Yaseen (1969) possess a smooth buccal capsule, without any thickenings, they probably belong to P. spiculogubernaculus. |
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Procamallanus (Procamallanus) sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine, body cavity [?] Hosts: Channa punctata (2,3)
Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Amin et al. 1982 (Dhaka); 2. Hossain et al. 1982 (Dhaka); 3. Huq et al. 1983 (Dhaka); 4. Chandra 1992a (Dhaka), 5. 1993b (Dhaka); 6. Banu et al. 1993 (Dhaka); 7. Ahmed 1996 (-) |
|
Procamallanus (Spirocamallanus) sp. |
(F,M) |
Location: stomach, intestine Hosts: Clarias batrachus (11,12,15)
Dist.: Dhaka, Rajshahi, Sylhet, Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 2. Ahmed and Rahman 1976 (Bay of Bengal), 3. 1977 (Bay of Bengal), 4. 1979 (Bay of Bengal); 5. Ahmed and Sanaullah 1976 (-)[90], 6. 1977a (Rajshahi); 7. Sanaullah and Ahmed 1978 (Rajshahi)[91]; 8. Ahmed 1981 (-), 9. 1996 (-); 10. Islam 1982 (Sylhet); 11. Rashid et al. 1983 (Dhaka); 12. Rashid and Haque 1984a (Dhaka); 13. Ahmed et al. 1986 (Bay of Bengal); 14. Chowdhury et al. 1990 (Dhaka); 15. Rashid 1990 (Dhaka); 16. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
SUPERFAMILY GNATHOSTOMATOIDEA
FAMILY GNATHOSTOMATIDAE
Echinocephalus sp. |
(F?) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Channa striata (1,2) Clarius batrachus (1,2) Dist.: Bangladesh Records: Ali 1968 (-); 2. Anon. 1974 (-) Remarks: Members of the genus Echinocephalus are parasites of elasmobranchs. The above records from freshwater fishes of Bangladesh are likely based on misidentifications. |
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Gnathostoma spinigerum Owen, 1836 larva |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine, viscera, body cavity, muscles Hosts: Anabas testudineus (11)
Dist.: Chittagong, Dhaka, Sylhet Records: 1. Bashirullah 1972b (Dhaka), 2. 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 3. Ahmed and Sanaullah 1976 (-)[92], 4. 1977a (Chittagong, Dhaka, Sylhet)[93]; 5. Sanaullah and Ahmed 1978 (Chittagong, Dhaka)[94]; 6. Ahmed 1981 (-), 7. 1996 (-); 8. Islam 1982 (Sylhet); 9. Nahida et al. 1994 (Dhaka); 10. Khanum et al. 1996 (Dhaka); 11. Akther et al. 1997 (Dhaka); 12. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: The life cycle was summarized by Moravec (1998). Definitive hosts are typically piscivorous mammals (mainly felids, canids and mustelids), including domestic dogs and cats, in which the adult parasite occurs in swellings of the stomach. Intermediate hosts include various species of freshwater copepods, where development to third-stage larvae occurs. Fish, amphibians and other animals that ingest infected copepods may become paratenic hosts, the larvae becoming encapsulated in the musculature and visceral organs. This nematode is the cause of gnathostomosis, a serious disease of man. |
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SUPERFAMILY PHYSALOPTEROIDEA
FAMILY PHYSALOPTERIDAE
Heliconema brevispiculum Baylis, 1934 |
(F) |
Location: stomach Host: Channa marulius Dist.: Rajshahi Record: Khan and Yaseen 1969 Remarks: This species was originally described from a marine eel (Muraenesox cinereus) from Australia (see Sood 1989); its presence in a freshwater fish in Bangladesh requires confirmation. Khan and Yaseen (1969) provided a description of their material, which comprised only three female specimens. |
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Proleptus inflatus (von Linstow, 1890) Baylis, 1933 |
(F) |
Location: stomach Host: Mastacembelus armatus Dist.: Sylhet Record: Khan and Yaseen 1969 Remarks: This species was originally described from a shark (Scyllium immoratum), locality unknown (see Soota 1983). Its occurence in a freshwater fish of Bangladesh seems unlikely. A description was provided by Khan and Yaseen (1969). |
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SUPERFAMILY HABRONEMATOIDEA
FAMILY CYSTIDICOLIDAE
Pseudoproleptus vestibulus Khera, 1953 |
(F) |
Location: esophagus, stomach, intestine Host: Mastacembelus armatus Dist: Bangladesh Record: Khanum and Parveen 1997 |
|
Spinitectus indicus Verma and Agarwal 1932 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Clupisoma garua (2)
Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Khan and Yaseen 1969 (Dhaka); 2. Chandra 1993b (Dhaka) Remarks: This species was redescribed by Khan and Yaseen (1969). |
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SUPERFAMILY THELAZIOIDEA
FAMILY RHABDOCHONIDAE
Rhabdochona bagarii Gupta and Srivastava, 1982 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Bagarius bagarius Dist.: Bangladesh Record: Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 |
|
Rhabdochona magna Khan and Yaseen, 1969 species inquirenda |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Rita rita Dist.: Chittagong Records: Khan and Yaseen 1969 (Chittagong); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: Due to the inadquate description based on four female nematodes, Moravec (1975) and Soota (1983) regarded this taxon as a species inquirenda. A redescription by Zaidi and Khan (1975), based only on female specimens taken from the same host in Pakistan, has added little new information. |
|
Unidentified Nematoda
Nematoda gen. sp. |
(F) |
Location: stomach?, intestine, body cavity Hosts: Channa punctata (1)
Dist.: Chittagong, Dhaka, Rajshahi Records: 1. Ali 1968 (-); 2. Anon. 1974 (Chittagong), 3. 1993 (Rajshahi); 4. Hassan et al. 1982 (Dhaka); 5. Ali et al. 1983 (Dhaka); 6. Rashid and Haque 1984b (Dhaka); 7. Chandra 1994b (Dhaka)[95]; 8. Ahmed 1996 (-) |
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PHYLUM ACANTHOCEPHALA
CLASS PALAEACANTHOCEPHALA
ORDER ECHINORHYNCHIDA
FAMILY ARHYTHMACANTHIDAE
Heterosentis plotosi Yamaguti, 1935 |
(B) |
Location: intestine Host: Plotosus canius Dist.: Barisal Records: Ahmed and Rouf 1981 (Barisal); Ahmed 1981 (Barisal); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
FAMILY ECHINORHYNCHIDAE
Echinorhynchus kushiroensis Fujita, 1921[96] |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine Host: Glossogobius giuris Dist.: Dhaka Records: Khanum et al. 1992 (-), 1994 (Dhaka) |
|
FAMILY HETERACANTHOCEPHALIDAE
Sachalinorhynchus sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Labeo rohita Dist.: Dhaka Records: Ahmed and Begum 1978 (Dhaka); Ahmed 1981 (Dhaka) |
|
FAMILY HYPOECHINORHYNCHIDAE
Hypoechinorhynchus sp. |
(B) |
Location: intestine Host: Mystus gulio Dist.: Barisal Records: Ahmed and Rouf 1981 (Barisal); Ahmed 1981 (Barisal); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
FAMILY RHADINORHYNCHIDAE
Cleaveius secundus (Tripathi, 1959) Golvan, 1969 |
(B) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Arius gagora Dist.: Barisal Records: Ahmed and Rouf 1981 (Barisal); Ahmed 1981 (Barisal); Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
Serrasentis sagittifer (Linton, 1889) Van Cleave, 1923 |
(M) |
Location: intestine Host: Lates calcarifer Dist.: Chittagong?[98] Records: Chandra 1992a, 1993b |
|
CLASS EOACANTHOCEPHALA
ORDER GYRACANTHOCEPHALA
FAMILY QUADRIGYRIDAE
Acanthogyrus (Acanthogyrus) acanthogyrus Thapar, 1927 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Catla catla Dist.: Dhaka Records: Ahmed and Begum 1978 (Dhaka); Ahmed and Rouf 1981 (Dhaka); Ahmed 1981 (Dhaka) |
|
Acanthogyrus (Acanthosentis) dattai (Podder, 1938) Dollfus and Golvan, 1956 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Puntius sophore Dist.: Dhaka Records: Ahmed and Rouf 1981 (Dhaka); Ahmed 1981 (Dhaka) |
|
Acanthogyrus (Acanthosentis) indicus (Tripathi, 1959) Chubb, 1982 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Setipinna phasa Dist.: Barisal, Dhaka Records: Ahmed and Rouf 1981 (Barisal, Dhaka); Ahmed 1981 (Barisal, Dhaka) |
|
Acanthogyrus (Acanthosentis) tilapiae (Baylis, 1948) Dollfus and Golvan, 1956 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Channa striata (1,2) Clarias batrachus (3) Dist.: Barisal Records: 1. Ahmed and Rouf 1981 (Barisal); 2. Ahmed 1981 (Barisal); 3. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
Acanthogyrus sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Clarias batrachus (2,3,4) Eutropiichthys murius (1,3,5) Dist.: Dhaka, Sylhet?, Rajshahi Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 2. Ahmed and Sanaullah 1976 (-)[99], 3. 1977a (Dhaka, Rajshahi)[100]; 4. Sanaullah and Ahmed 1978 (Rajshahi); 5. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) |
|
Pallisentis (Brevitritospinus) allahabadii Agarwal, 1958 |
(F) |
Location: intestine, liver, mesenteries Host: Channa punctata Dist.: Barisal, Dhaka Records: Ahmed and Rouf 1981 (Barisal, Dhaka); Ahmed 1981 (Barisal, Dhaka) Remarks: There are many reports of Pallisentis spp. occurring free and encapsulated in the viscera and body cavity, indicating that members of this genus frequently use fish as paratenic hosts. |
|
Pallisentis (Pallisentis) gaboes (MacCallum, 1918) Van Cleave, 1928 |
(F) |
Location: intestine, body cavity, mesenteries Hosts: Channa striata (1,2,3)
Dist.: Barisal, Dhaka Records: 1. Ahmed and Begum 1978 (Dhaka); 2. Ahmed and Rouf 1981 (Barisal, Dhaka); 3. Ahmed 1981 (Barisal, Dhaka); 4. Khanum et al. 1992 (-), 5. 1994 (Dhaka), 6. 1996 Dhaka); 7. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: There are many reports of Pallisentis spp. occurring free and encapsulated in the viscera and body cavity, indicating that members of this genus frequently use fish as paratenic hosts. |
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Pallisentis (Pallisentis) garuai (Sahay, Sinha and Gosh, 1971) Jain and Gupta, 1979 |
(F) |
Location: stomach [?], intestine Hosts: Clupisoma garua (1,2,3) Silonia silondia (1,2) Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Ahmed and Rouf 1981 (Dhaka); 2. Ahmed 1981 (Dhaka); 3. Ahmed and Ezaz 1997 (-) Remarks: The synonomy follows Amin et al. (2000). |
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Pallisentis (Pallisentis) nagpurensis (Bhalerao, 1931) Baylis, 1933 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Channa marulius (1,4) C. punctata (1) Dist.: Barisal, Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 2. Ahmed and Rouf 1981 (Barisal, Dhaka); 3. Ahmed 1981 (Barisal, Dhaka); 4. Khanum et al. 1993 (-) |
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Pallisentis (Pallisentis) nandai Sarker, 1953[101] |
(F) |
Location: stomach [?], intestine; viscera Hosts: Glossogobius giuris (7,8) Nandus nandus (1,2,3,4,5,6,9) Dist.: Barisal, Chittagong, Dhaka, Sylhet? Records: 1. Rahman and Ali 1967 (Chittagong); 2. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 3. Anon. 1974 (-); 4. Ahmed and Rouf 1981 (Barisal, Dhaka); 5. Ahmed 1981 (Barisal, Dhaka); 6. Chowdhury et al. 1982 (Dhaka); 7. Khanum et al. 1992 (-), 8. 1994 (Dhaka); 9. Nahida et al. 1994 (Dhaka) Remarks: There are many reports of Pallisentis spp. occurring free and encapsulated in the viscera and body cavity, indicating that members of this genus frequently use fish as paratenic hosts. |
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Pallisentis (Demidueterospinus) ophiocephali (Thapar, 1931) Baylis, 1933[102] |
(F) |
Location: stomach, intestine, viscera, muscle [?] Hosts: Channa marulius (2)
Dist.: Chittagong, Dhaka Records: 1. Rahman and Ali 1967 (-); 2. Anon. 1974 (-); 3. Hossain et al. 1982 (Dhaka); 4. Huq et al. 1983 (Dhaka); 5. Chandra 1985a (Dhaka); 6. Hussain and Ali 1986 (Dhaka); 7. Chandra and Golder 1987 (Chittagong); 8. Golder et al. 1987 (Chittagong); 9. Rahman 1989 (-); 10. Akhtar et al. 1989 (Dhaka), 11. 1990 (Dhaka) Remarks: This acanthocephalan has also been reported from frogs (Rana tigrina) by Chandra and Rahman (1988) and Chandra et al. (1990). There are many reports of Pallisentis spp. occurring free and encapsulated in the viscera and body cavity, indicating that members of this genus frequently use fish as paratenic hosts. |
|
Pallisentis sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine, body cavity, viscera Hosts: Channa gachua (2)
Dist.: Barisal, Chittagong, Dhaka, Rajshahi, Sylhet? Records: 1. Ali 1968 (-); 2. Bashirullah 1973a (Dhaka &/or Sylhet); 3. Anon. 1974 (Chittagong); 4. Ahmed and Sanaullah 1976 (-)[103], 5. 1977a (Rajshahi); 6. Ahmed and Begum 1978 (Barisal, Dhaka); 7. Sanaullah and Ahmed 1978 (Rajshahi); 8. Ahmed and Rouf 1981 (Dhaka); 9. Ahmed 1981 (Dhaka); 10. Banu et al. 1993 (Dhaka) Remarks: There are many reports of Pallisentis spp. occurring free and encapsulated in the viscera and body cavity, indicating that members of this genus frequently use fish as paratenic hosts. |
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ORDER NEOECHINORHYNCHIDA
FAMILY NEOECHINORHYNCHIDAE
Neoechinorhynchus aminulhaquei Chandra, 1983[104] |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Mystus vittatus Dist.: Dhaka Record: Chandra 1983b |
|
Neoechinorhynchus chilkaensis Podder, 1937 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Host: Mugil cephalus Dist.: Chittagong?[105] Records: Chandra 1992a, 1993b |
|
Neoechinorhynchus topseyi Podder, 1937 |
(F) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Polynemus paradiseus Dist.: Dhaka Records: Ahmed and Rouf 1981 (Dhaka); Ahmed 1981 (Dhaka) Remarks: The host is a marine and brackish water species that frequently enters fresh water during the breeding season (see Froese and Pauly 2001). |
|
Neoechinorhynchus sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine, viscera Hosts: Cynoglossus lingua (2,3)
Dist.: Barisal, Chittagong, Dhaka, Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Bashirullah 1973a (Bay of Bengal); 2. Ahmed and Rouf 1981 (Barisal); 3. Ahmed 1981 (Barisal); 4. Chandra and Golder 1987 (Chittagong); 5. Golder et al. 1987 (Chittagong); 6. Chowdhury et al. 1990 (Dhaka) Remarks: Although reported from a number of hosts collected in estuarine or marine coastal waters, members of the genus Neoechinorhynchus complete their life cycles in fresh water. |
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Unidentified Acanthocephala
Acanthocephala gen. sp. |
(F) |
Location: intestine Hosts: Clarias batrachus (3)
Dist: Chittagong, Dhaka Records: 1. Anon. 1974 (Chittagong); 2. Ali et al. 1983 (Dhaka); 3. Ahmed 1996 (-) |
|
PHYLUM ANNELIDA
CLASS HIRUDINEA
ORDER RHYNCHOBDELLIDA
FAMILY GLOSSIPHONIIDAE
Hemiclepsis marginata (O.F. Müller, 1774) Vedjovsky, 1884 |
(F) |
Location: skin Hosts: Clarias batrachus (1) Labeo bata (2) Dist: Chittagong Records: 1. Anon. 1974 (-); 2. Sanaullah 1984 (Chittagong) Remarks: According to McDonald and Margolis (1995), this is a European species. Its occurrence in South Asia requires confirmation. |
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ORDER GNATHOBDELLIDA
FAMILY PISCICOLIDAE
Piscicola sp. |
(F) |
Location: skin Host: Clarias gariepinus Dist.: Dhaka Record: Banu et al. 1993 |
|
Unidentified Hirudinea
Hirudinea gen. sp. |
(F) |
Includes: leeches Location: [body surface] Host: fish Dist.: Chittagong Records: Golder et al. 1983 (Chittagong)[106]; Sanaullah 1993 (-) |
|
PHYLUM ARTHROPODA
CLASS CRUSTACEA
SUBCLASS BRANCHIURA
ORDER ARGULOIDEA
FAMILY ARGULIDAE
Argulus bengalensis Ramakrishna, 1952 |
(F) |
Location: external surface Host: Eutropiichthys vacha Dist.: Bangladesh Record: Anon. 1974 |
|
Argulus sp. |
(F) |
Location: skin, fins, eyes, gills [?] Hosts: Catla catla (1,2,3,4)
Dist.: Barisal, Chittagong Records: 1. Rahman 1967 (Chittagong), 2. 1968 (Chittagong)[107]; 3. Ali 1968 (Chittagong); 4. Anon. 1974 (Barisal, Chittagong); 5. Ahmed and Sanaullah 1976 (-)[108], 6. 1977a (Dhaka); 7. Sanaullah and Ahmed 1978 (Dhaka); 8. Islam et al. 1982 (Dhaka); 9. Golder et al. 1983 (Dhaka)[109]; 10. Hussain and Ali 1986 (Dhaka); 11. Sanaullah 1993 (-); 12. Ahmed 1993 (-); 13. Chowdhury 1993 (-); 14. Hossain 1993 (-); 15. Banu et al. 1993 (Dhaka) Remarks: Rahman (1967, 1968) reported that fish lice (Argulus) caused a mass mortality of major carps in a small pond at the Fisheries Research Institute in Chandpur in November 1964. |
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SUBCLASS ENTOMOSTRACA
ORDER COPEPODA
SUBORDER CYCLOPOIDA
FAMILY LERNAEIDAE
Lernaea cyprinacea Linnaeus, 1758[110] |
(F) |
Location: skin, under accessory respiratory organs, above gill clefts, liver, abdomenal muscles Hosts: Channa punctata (1) Clarias batrachus (2) Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Hossain et al. 1978 (Dhaka); 2. Zaman and Akhtar 1990 (-) |
|
Lernaea sp. |
(F) |
Includes: "learnaeasis" Location: skin Hosts: Ctenopharyngodon idellus (3) Hypopthalmichthys molitrix (3) Dist.: Dhaka Records: 1. Sanaullah 1993 (-); 2. Chowdhury 1993 (-); 3. Banu et al. 1993 (Dhaka) |
|
SUBORDER POECILOSTOMATOIDA
FAMILY ERGASILIDAE
Ergasilus sp. |
(F) |
Location: gills Host: Cynoglossus arel Dist.: Bay of Bengal Records: Ahmed and Rahman 1976 (Bay of Bengal), 1977 (Bay of Bengal) |
|
SUBORDER SIPHONOSTOMATOIDEA
FAMILY PENNELLIDAE
Lernaeocera sp.[111] |
(F) |
Location: gills Host: Heteropneustes fossilis Dist.: Rajshahi Records: Ahmed and Sanaullah 1976 (-)[112], 1977a (Rajshahi); Sanaullah and Ahmed 1978 (Rajashahi) Remarks: As species of this genus are parasites of marine fishes, this report is regarded as a misidentification. |
|
SUBCLASS MALACOSTRACA
ORDER ISOPODA
FAMILY CYMOTHOIDAE
Ichthyoxenus amurensis (Gertsfeld, 1858) Herklots, 1870 |
(F) |
Location: body cavity in region of pelvic fin Host: Pseudeutropius atherinoides Dist.: Dhaka Record: Hossain et al. 1978 Remarks: The synonymy follows Kusakin (1979). |
|
Cymothoidae gen. sp. |
(M) |
Location: buccal cavity Host: Psettodes erumei Dist.: Bay of Bengal Records: Ahmed and Rahman 1976 (Bay of Bengal), 1977 (Bay of Bengal) |
|
Unidentified Isopoda
Isopoda gen. sp. |
(F, M) |
Location: skin, stomach Hosts: Catla catla (2) Polydactylus sextarius (2) Dist.: Chittagong Records: 1. Ali 1968 (-); 2. Anon. 1974 (Chittagong) |
|
Unidentified Crustacea
Crustacea gen. sp. |
(M) |
Location: skin Hosts: Ompok pabda (2) fish (1)[113] Dist.: Dhaka, Bay of Bengal Records: 1. Ahmed and Rahman 1979 (Bay of Bengal); 2. Ali et al. 1983 (Dhaka) |
|
NOMINA NUDA
The following names appear in the Bangladeshi literature. However, because their authors provided neither species descriptions nor differential diagnoses, they are unrecognizable. These names are unavailable and therefore, should not be used (see the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, Article 13).
Digenea
Lecithochirium coxium Bashirullah, 1973[114]
Lecithochirium margolisi Bashirullah, 1973[115]
Lecithocladium daccai Bashirullah, 1973[116]
Monogenea
Allomonaxine atropoides Bashirullah, 1973[117]
Bicotyle bangladeshi Bashirullah, 1973[118]
Kuhnia pricei Bashirullah, 1973[119]
Loimos polytesticularis Bashirullah, 1973[120]
Pseudothoracocotyla coxbazari Bashirullah, 1973[121]
Nematoda
Camallanus gaboes Akhtar, Chowdhury, Latifa and Nahar, 1989[122]
Camallanus gibsonia Bashirullah, 1973[123]
Camallanus zakeri Hafizuddin and Islam, 1991[124]
Indocucullanus gibsonia Islam, 1982[125]
Procamallanus bangladeshi Bashirullah, 1973[126]
Procamallanus jalaliai Islam, 1982[127]
Spirocamallanus kaptaiensis Hafizuddin and Islam, 1991[128]
Spirocamallanus karnaphuliensis Hafizuddin and Islam, 1991[129]
Spirocamallanus murius Bashirullah, 1973[130]
Zeylanema bidigitalis Bashirullah, 1970[131]
Zeylanema tridensis Bashirullah, 1970[132]
Zeylanema yehia Bashirullah, 1970[133]
[4] Chowdhury (1993)
tentatively identified Costia as a probable cause of disease in
Bangladeshi fish. [5] The parasite species name was misspelled "multifilis" by Hossain and Barua (1991), Chowdhury (1993) and Banu et al. (1999). [6] Chowdhury (1993) listed "Ichthyophthirius multifilis (?)" as a probable pathogen causing disease of fish in Bangladesh. [7] The host identification was given as "mrigal." [8] Chowdhury (1993) tentatively identified Trichodina as a cause of "sliminess" in Bangladeshi fish. [9] The record of Anon. (1993) involves a tentative parasite identification. [10] The species name was misspelled "multicasecum" by Hossain et al. (1982). [11] Tentative parasite identification (given as "black spot disease" "...caused by...Neascus (Posthodiplostomum?)..."). [12] The species name misspelled as "aspinosinensis" by Ahmed and Ezaz (1997). [13] Bashirullah (1973a) inadvertently created the nomen nudum Neobucephalopsis clupisomius Bashirullah, 1973 (as "Neobucephalopsis clupisomius Bashirullah & Hafizuddin, 1973"). [14] Bashirullah (1973a) and Ahmed (1981) erroneously gave the species name as "bengalensis." [15] The species name was misspelled as "ozaki" by Bashirullah (1973a) and Ahmed (1981). [16] Estuarine fishes examined by Chandra (1992a) were noted to have been collected mostly from Cox's Bazar, Chittagong and Taknaf [Teknaf], which are all in the Chittagong Division. [17] The record of Chandra (1992a) was given as "Himiurid [sic] (unidentified)." [18] The species name was misspelled "hypselobagrii" by Chowdhury et al. (1986) and "hypselobargi" by Ahmed (1996). [19] Estuarine fishes examined by Chandra (1993) were noted to have been collected mostly from Cox's Bazar, Chittagong and Teknaf, which are all in the Chittagong Division. [20] Estuarine fishes examined by Chandra (1992b) were noted to have been collected mostly from Cox's Bazar, Chittagong and Teknaf, which are all in the Chittagong Division. [21] The species name was misspelled "saharanpurensis" by Bashirullah (1973a), Ahmed (1981), Ahmed and Saha (1983) and Akther et al. (1997), and as "shalanpurensis" by Ahmed and Ezaz (1997). [22] The generic name was misspelled "Eucredium" by Bashirullah (1973a) and Ahmed (1981). [23] The species name was originally spelled "lühei." It has been corrected to "luehi" following Article 32 (d) (I) (2) of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature. [24] Bangladeshi authors subsequent to Bashirullah and Islam (1970) have incorrectly spelled the species name as "yosufzai." [25] Bashirullah (1973a) inadvertently created the nomen nudum Pleurogenoides notopteri Bashirullah, 1973 (as "Pleurogenoides notopteri Bashirullah & Hafizuddin, 1973"). [26] The host record of Ali (1968) for Ompok pabda was given only as "C. pabda." [27] The record of Anon. (1993) is taken from Figure 7. [28] The record of "black spot disease" by Golder et al. (1983) is tentatively considered to refer to infection by an unidentified digenean. [29] Chandra (1994b) examined four species of siluroid catfishes, but did not indicate to which host(s) this record pertains. [30] The species name was misspelled "vestator" by Banu et al. (1999). [31] The record is taken from Figure 5 of Anon. (1993). [32] The many difficulties surrounding the taxonomy of caryophyllidean cestodes described from the South Asian Region are discussed by Mackiewicz (1981). [33] Ahmed and Sanaullah (1976) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but did not indicate specific collection localities for individual host or parasite species. [34] Ahmed and Sanaullah (1976) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but did not indicate specific collection localities for individual host or parasite species. [35] Ahmed and Sanaullah (1977b) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but did not indicate specific collection localities for individual parasites. [36] Sanaullah and Ahmed (1978) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but in most cases, did not indicate specific collection localities for individual parasites. They did note that D. penetrans occurred in C. batrachus at all study areas. [37] Ahmed and Sanaullah (1976) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but did not indicate specific collection localities for individual host or parasite species. [38] Ahmed and Sanaullah (1977b) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but in most cases, did not indicate specific collection localities for individual parasites. [39] Sanaullah and Ahmed (1978) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but in most cases, did not indicate specific collection localities for individual parasites. [40] Ahmed and Sanaullah (1976) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but did not indicate specific collection localities for individual host or parasite species. [41] Ahmed and Sanaullah (1977b) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but did not indicate specific collection localities for individual parasites. [42] Sanaullah and Ahmed (1978) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but in most cases, did not indicate specific collection localities for individual parasites. [43] Anon. (1974) reported "Lytocystus clarias" [sic] from Clarias batrachus. This new combination is believed to have been the result of a lapsus. [44] Ahmed and Ezaz (1997) listed "Pseudocaryophyllaeus clariae" from walking catfish. This new combination is believed to have been the result of a lapsus. [45] Chandra (1994b) examined four species of siluroid catfishes, but did not indicate to which host(s) this record pertains. [46] The specimens of Southwell and Prashad (1918a) were collected from the Pusser River, Khulna District, Bengal. [47] Southwell and Prashad (1918b) did not specify where their material was collected, only noting that their main observations were made "...at Khulna and Kalna (in the district of Jessore), in the rivers Pussur and Madhumati." (now Bangladesh), with additional work being conducted at several localities in India. [48] The location for the record of Southwell (1930) was given simply as "Bengal, India." [49] The specimens of Southwell and Prashad (1918a) were collected from the Pusser River, Khulna District, Bengal. [50] The location for the record of Southwell (1930) was given simply as "Bengal, India." [51] The records of Southwell (1929,1930) for Arius gagora were from the Sunderbans, Delta of the Ganges, Bengal, India. As this mangrove area spans both present day India and Bangladesh, these records are included as possibly pertaining to Bangladesh. [52] Southwell and Prashad (1918b) did not specify where their material was collected, only noting that their main observations were made "...at Khulna and Kalna (in the district of Jessore), in the rivers Pussur and Madhumati." (now Bangladesh), with additional work being conducted at several localities in India. [53] Estuarine fishes examined by Chandra (1992a, 1993b) were noted to have been collected mostly from Cox's Bazar, Chittagong and Teknaf, which are all in the Chittagong Division. [54] Estuarine fishes examined by Chandra (1992a, 1993b) were noted to have been collected mostly from Cox's Bazar, Chittagong and Teknaf, which are all in the Chittagong Division. [55] Estuarine fishes examined by Chandra (1992a, 1993b) were noted to have been collected mostly from Cox's Bazar, Chittagong and Teknaf, which are all in the Chittagong Division. [56] The generic name was misspelled "Calliotetrarhynchus" by Chandra (1992a, 1993b). [57] Estuarine fishes examined by Chandra (1992a, 1993b) were noted to have been collected mostly from Cox's Bazar, Chittagong and Teknaf, which are all in the Chittagong Division. [58] Southwell and Prashad (1918a) gave the collection locality as Pusser River, Khulna District, Bengal. [59] The parasite species name has been misspelled "ophiocephalina" by Bangladeshi authors. [60] In an abstract, Zamin et al. (1992b) initially reported diphyllobothridean larvae from Tenualosa ilisha. In a more complete report of their study, they subsequently (Zamin et al. 1992b) recorded a single specimen from the intestine of this fish, variously referring to it as Diphyllobothrium sp., "Diphyllobothridean" and "Diphyllobothrideans spp." [61] Southwell (1930) listed this species from "Khulna, Bengal, India." [62] A listing of the nematodes recorded from fishes of Bangladesh was given by Chandra (1992b). This paper contains no original records. [63] For many records from Bangladesh, neither the life-cycle stage nor the location within the host is indicated. [64] The generic name was misspelled "Goezi" by Ali (1968) and Anon. (1974). [65] Sawfish (family Pristidae) occur in marine and estuarine environments, and may enter fresh water. [66] The generic name was misspelled "Heterophylum" by all Bangladeshi authors except Bashirullah (1973a). [67] Bashirullah (1973a) reported Heterotyphlum sp. from the stomach of the clupeid fish Ilisha filigera, but did not indicate the stage of maturity. [68] Ahktar et al. (1989), in their Table 3, also referred to these nematodes as immature Ascaris and as "Ascaridian larva." [69] Ahmed and Rahman (1979) examined Psettodes erumei and Cynoglossus macrolepidotus (syn. of C. arel), but did not indicate to which host this record pertains. [70] Ahmed and Sanaullah (1976) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but did not indicate specific collection localities for individual host or parasite species. [71] Ahmed and Sanaullah (1977b) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but did not indicate specific collection localities for individual parasites. [72] Sanaullah and Ahmed (1978) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but in most cases, did not indicate specific collection localities for individual parasites. [73] The taxonomy of the camallanids of the South Asian Region remains quite confused, and this group is in urgent need of critical study. For a recent treatment of generic and subgeneric structure of the family Camallanidae, see Moravec (1998). [74] Khan and Yaseen (1969) incorrectly noted that the host, Mastacembelus pancalus (syn. of Macrognathus pancalus) (the barred spiney eel), is a marine fish; it is a freshwater species that enters estuaries (see Froese and Pauly 2001). [75] Bashirullah (1973a) inadvertently created the nomen nudum "Camallanus adamsia Bashirullah, 1973." This name was also used by Ahmed (1981). [76] The species name was misspelled "vachi" by Chandra (1993b). [77] The species name misspelled "allai" by Ahmed and Ezaz (1997). [78] The parasite species name was misspelled "mozabukae" by Khan and Yaseen (1969). [79] Bashirullah (1973a) inadvertently created the nomen nudum "Procamallanus cancilis Bashirullah, 1973" (as "Procamallanus cancilus Bashirullah and Hafizuddin, 1973"). [80] The species name was misspelled "heteropneustes" by Ahmed and Ezaz (1997). [81] In an apparent lapsus for Procamallanus heteropneustus, the combination "Camallanus heteropneustus" appears in the abstract accompanying the paper by Zaman et al. (1992a). [82] Ahmed and Ezaz (1997), in an apparent error, listed a record from Ompok bimaculatus as S. heteropneustes [sic]. [83] The record of Rahman and Ali (1968) involves a tentative parasite identification. [84] The species name was misspelled "olsenia" by Bashirullah (1973a), Ahmed and Sanaullah (1976, 1977a), Ahmed (1981), Islam et al. (1982), Chowdhury et al. (1990) and Ahmed and Ezaz (1997). [85] This name was created by Akram (1975) for Procamalanus olseni Bashirullah, 1973. Akram (1975) was unaware that Bashirullah (1974), recognizing that the specific epithet olseni was preoccupied in the genus Procamallanus, had already changed it to intestinecolas. [86] Ahmed and Sanaullah (1976) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but did not indicate specific collection localities for individual host or parasite species. [87] The record of Ahmed and Sanaullah (1977a) from an unidentified fish from Dhaka is based on the unpublished thesis of A.K.M. Hafizuddin. [88] Sanaullah and Ahmed (1978) noted that this nematode (as Spirocamallanus intestinecolas) was found only in fishes from Dhaka and Bogra (Rajshahi), but did not indicate if it occurred in both hosts at each locality. [89] Ahmed and Rahman (1979) examined Psettodes erumei and Cynoglossus macrolepidotus (syn. of C. arel), but did not indicate to which host this record applies. [90] Ahmed and Sanaullah (1976) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but did not indicate specific collection localities for individual host or parasite species. [91] The listing of Spirocamallanus sp. from Clarias batrachus in Table 1 of Sanaullah and Ahmed (1978) is apparently an error, as these authors later indicated that only Heteropneustes fossilis was infected. [92] Ahmed and Sanaullah (1976) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but did not indicate specific collection localities for individual hosts or parasites. [93] The records of Ahmed and Sanaullah (1977a) for Mystus microphthalmus and Wallago attu are based on the unpublished thesis of M.A. Islam, and are from Sylhet. [94] Sanaullah and Ahmed (1978) noted that Gnathostoma spinigerum was found only from the Mymensingh and Noakhali study areas, but did not indicate if both hosts were infected in both areas. [95] Chandra (1994b) examined four species of siluroid catfishes, but did not indicate to which host(s) his record pertains. [96] The parasite species name was misspelled "kushiroense" by Khanum et al. (1992, 1994), and also as "kushiroence" in Tables 1-3 of Khanum et al. (1994). [97] The parasite species name was misspelled "secundum" by all Bangladeshi authors. [98] Estuarine fishes examined by Chandra (1992a, 1993b) were noted to have been collected mostly from Cox's Bazar, Chittagong and Teknaf, which are all in the Chittagong Division. [99] Ahmed and Sanaullah (1976) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but did not indicate specific collection localities for individual host or parasite species. [100] The record of of Acanthosentis sp. in Clupisoma muris (syn. of Eutropiichthys murius) from Dhaka given by Ahmed and Sanaullah (1977a) was based on the unpublished thesis of A.K.M. Hafizuddin. [101] The parasite species name was misspelled "nandi" by Rahman and Ali (1967) and Chowdhury et al. (1982). [102] The parasite species name was misspelled "ophicephali" by Rahman and Ali (1967), Anon. (1974), Rahman (1989) and Akhtar et al. (1989, 1990). [103] Ahmed and Sanaullah (1976) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but did not indicate specific collection localities for individual host or parasite species. [104] The species name was originally spelled aminul-haquei. However, as the use of a hyphen in a species name in this context is not permitted (see International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, Article 31 (d) (vi)), it has been corrected. [105] Estuarine fishes examined by Chandra (1992a,1993b) were noted to have been collected mostly from Cox's Bazar, Chittagong and Teknaf, which are all in the Chittagong Division. [106] The record of Golder et al. (1983) is based on a fish farmer survey. [107] The records of Rahman (1968) for some hosts (Oreochromis mossambicus, Notopterus notopterus, Colisa fasciatus and Heteropneustes fossilis) involved experimental exposure in an aquarium. Catla catla and Labeo rohita were both naturally and experimentally infected. [108] Ahmed and Sanaullah (1976) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but did not indicate specific collection localities for individual host or parasite species. [109] In a fish farmer survey, Golder et al. (1983) noted argulosis in a mixed population of "catla," "rui" and "mrigal," but did not indicate which hosts were infected. [110] The parasite species name was misspelled "cyprinacae" by Hossain et al. (1978). [111] The generic name was misspelled "Larnaeocera" by all authors. [112] Ahmed and Sanaullah (1976) examined catfishes from six regions of Bangladesh, but did not indicate specific collection localities for individual host or parasite species. [113] Ahmed and Rahman (1979) studied the parasites of Cynoglossus macrolepidotus (syn. of C. arel) and Psettodes erumei, but did not indidate to which host this record petains. [114] This nomen nudum was used by Bashirullah (1973a) as "Lecithochirium coxium Bashirullah and D'Silva, 1973." [115] This nomen nudum was used by Bashirullah (1973a) as "Lecithochirium margolisi Bashirullah & D'Silva, 1973." [116] This nomen nudum was used by Bashirullah (1973a) as "Lecithocladium daccai Bashirullah and Hafizuddin, 1973." [117] This nomen nudum was used by Bashirullah (1973a) as "Allomonaxine atropoides Bashirullah and Khan, 1973." [118] This nomen nudum was used by Bashirullah (1973a) as "Bicotyle bangladeshi Bashirullah & Khan, 1973." [119] This nomen nudum was used by Bashirullah (1973a) as "Kuhnia pricei Bashirullah & Khan, 1973." [120] This nomen nudum was used by Bashirullah (1973a) as "Loimos polytesticularis Bashirullah & Khan, 1973." [121] This nomen nudum was used by Bashirullah (1973a) as "Pseudothoracocotyla coxbazari Bashirulla & Khan, 1973." [122] This name was reported as "Camallanus gaboes Pearse, 1933," by Akhtar et al. (1989) and as "Camallanus gaboes Railliet and Henry, 1915" by Khanum et al. (1992,1994); however, no species of camallanid nematode bearing this specific epithet has ever been described. [123] This nomen nudum was created by Bashirullah (1973a). [124] Hafizuddin and Islam (1991), in a conference abstract, named three new species of Nematoda, Camallanus zakeri, Spirocamallanus kaptaiensis and S. karnaphuliensis; however, these species were never described nor illustrated. [125] Islam (1982), in a conference abstract, named two new species of Nematoda, Procamallanus jalaliai and Indocucullanus gibsonia, however, these species were never described nor illustrated. [126] Bashirullah (1973a) created a nomen nudum, Procamallanus bangladeshi Bashirullah, 1973, by reporting, without description, "Procamallanus bangladeshi Bashirullah & Hafizuddin, 1973" as a parasite of Heteropneustes fossilis. The same material was later apparently described as P. sprenti by Bashirullah and Hafizuddin (1974) (see De and Moravec 1980). [127] Islam (1982), in a conference abstract, named two new species of Nematoda, Procamallanus jalaliai and Indocucullanus gibsonia, however, these species were never described nor illustrated. [128] Hafizuddin and Islam (1991), in a conference abstract, named three new species of Nematoda, Camallanus zakeri, Spirocamallanus kaptaiensis and S. karnaphuliensis; however, these species were never described nor illustrated. [129] Hafizuddin and Islam (1991), in a conference abstract, named three new species of Nematoda, Camallanus zakeri, Spirocamallanus kaptaiensis and S. karnaphuliensis; however, these species were never described or illustrated. [130] This species name was given without description, as "Spirocamallanus murius Bashirullah and Hafizuddin, 1973," by Bashirullah (1973a). Sood (1989) suggested that the record of Bashirullah (1973a) might involve Procamallanus inglisi (a synonym of P. (Spirocamallanus) mysti Karve, 1952). [131] This nomen nudum was created by Bashirullah (1970) in a conference abstract. [132] This nomen nudum was created by Bashirullah (1970) in a conference abstract. [133] This nomen nudum was created by Bashirullah (1970) in a conference abstract. |