New host and locality record for the parasitic isopod Ceratothoa carinata (Bianconi, 1869) (Crustacea: Isopoda: Cymothoidae), with molecular insights into its phylogeography
Citation
Salari M, Khalaji-Pirbalouty V, Ranjbar M S, Shahdadi A, plazi (2025). New host and locality record for the parasitic isopod Ceratothoa carinata (Bianconi, 1869) (Crustacea: Isopoda: Cymothoidae), with molecular insights into its phylogeography. Plazi.org taxonomic treatments database. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/wn59ht accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-04.Description
This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Salari, Mohammad, Khalaji-Pirbalouty, Valiallah, Ranjbar, Mohammad Sharif, Shahdadi, Adnan (2025): New host and locality record for the parasitic isopod Ceratothoa carinata (Bianconi, 1869) (Crustacea: Isopoda: Cymothoidae), with molecular insights into its phylogeography. Zootaxa 5621 (2): 262-272, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5621.2.6, URL: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5621.2.6
Abstract
A male and two females of the cymothoid isopod Ceratothoa carinata (Bianconi, 1869) were found in the buccal cavity of the Talang queenfish, Scomberoides commersonnianus Lacepède, 1801, representing a new host record. This parasitic isopod is widely distributed across the Indo-West Pacific, with its type locality in Mozambique. However, this is the first record of the species from the Gulf of Oman. Morphologically, our specimens closely match the diagnosis of the neotype. As there has been no previous record or description of the male for this species, the male characteristics are briefly described herein. In addition to morphological comparisons, we obtained two COX1 sequences and constructed a phylogeny using available Ceratothoa sequences from GenBank. In the phylogenetic trees, specimens of C. carinata from Japan, the Philippines, and the Gulf of Oman formed a monophyletic group within a well-supported clade. The mean genetic distances between C. carinata and other Ceratothoa species ranged from 17% to 31.5%, significantly exceeding the maximum genetic distance of 2.7% within C. carinata. Thirteen haplotypes were identified from the 13 sequences of C. carinata, with no clear geographic pattern in the haplotype network. The molecular phylogeny thus confirms the widespread distribution of C. carinata across the Indo-West Pacific, facilitated by its migratory hosts.
Taxonomic Coverages
Geographic Coverages
Bibliographic Citations
Contacts
Mohammad Salarioriginator
Valiallah Khalaji-Pirbalouty
originator
Mohammad Sharif Ranjbar
originator
Adnan Shahdadi
originator
Guido Sautter
administrative point of contact
email: gsautter@gmail.com
homepage: http://plazi.org
publisher
Magnolia Press
St. Lukes 1346
Auckland
NZ
email: magnolia@mapress.com
homepage: https://www.mapress.com/
distributor
Plazi
Bern
CH
email: info@plazi.org
homepage: https://plazi.org/
plazi
metadata author
Plazi