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Molecular evidence linking the larval and adult stages of Mexiconema cichlasomae (Dracunculoidea: Daniconematidae) from Mexico, with notes on its phylogenetic position among Dracunculoidea.

We describe the larval developmental stages and life cycle of the dracunculid nematode Mexiconema cichlasomae in both the intermediate, Argulus yucatanus (Crustacea: Branchiura), and definitive hosts, Cichlasoma urophthalmus (Perciformes: Cichlidae), from the Celestun tropical coastal lagoon, Yucatan, Mexico. The morphological analyses showed significant differences between the total length of L1 found in M. cichlasomae gravid female and L2-L3 in A. yucatanus. This result indicates that the M. cichlasomae larval development occurs in the intermediate host. We obtained sequences from the small subunit (SSU) ribosomal marker from larval stages of M. cichlasomae in A. yucatanus and adult nematodes in C. urophthalmus. Our morphological and molecular results support conspecificity between M. cichlasomae larvae in A. yucatanus and the adult stages in C. urophthalmus. We briefly discuss the phylogenetic position of M. cichlasomae among the Daniconematidae, and provide evidence of the monophyly of the daniconematids associated with branchiurid intermediate hosts. Based on the phylogenetic results, we support the transfer of the Mexiconema genus to the family Skrjabillanidae and do not support the lowering of family Daniconematidae to subfamily.

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