Phytobdella catenifera

Phytobdella catenifera is a large (5-cm long) terrestrial leech found in Peninsular Malaysia.[1] John Percy Moore[2] chose this species’ epithet ‘catenifera’ after the striking chain-striped pattern on the creature's back (Latin catena = chain).

Phytobdella catenifera
Chain-striped leech
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Annelida
Clade: Pleistoannelida
Clade: Sedentaria
Class: Clitellata
Subclass: Hirudinea
Order: Arhynchobdellida
Family: Cylicobdellidae
Genus: Phytobdella
Species:
P. catenifera
Binomial name
Phytobdella catenifera

Range and ecology

edit

In 1935, the then curator of the Raffles Museum, Michael Tweedie, collected the type specimen among 23 of its kin on a brown tortoise Manouria emys. The type locality is Gunung Pulai in Johore and there is one record from Gabai Falls in Selangor. One of the reasons P. catenifera is seldom seen is that it is only attracted to reptiles and is of no threat to humans. However, one species of Phytobdella (P. lineata) from Papua New Guinea is thought to be zoonotic (i.e. it can transmit diseases to humans).[3] Some texts on tropical medicine erroneously list P. catenifera among aquatic species occurring in sub-Saharan Africa. However, the genus Phytobdella is restricted to the Indo-Pacific Region, with P. catenifera being found only in Peninsular Malaysia[4] and other species being found in the Philippines (P. meyeri), the Moluccas (P. moluccensis) and Papua New Guinea (P. lineata and P. maculosa). A possible sixth species, as yet unidentified, has been found in Laos.[5]

Taxonomy

edit

Recent work on leech genetics and morphology suggests that the Indo-Pacific land leeches originated in Gondwana (a southern supercontinent that existed about 500 to 200 million years ago).[6] Although findings on Phytobdella have yet to be published, the molecular analysis appears to support earlier studies[7][8] that place all Asian land leeches in the family Haemadipsidae.

References

edit
  1. ^ Sharma, R.E. and C.H. Fernando. 1961. Leeches and their Ways. Malay. Nat. J. 15.152-159.
  2. ^ Moore, J.P. 1942. Leeches (Hirudinea) principally from the Malay Peninsula, with descriptions of new species. Bull. Raffles Mus. 14. 64-68.
  3. ^ Owen, I.L. 2005. Parasitic zoonoses in Papua New Guinea. Journal of Helminthology 79. 1-14.
  4. ^ Govedich, F.R., W.E. Moser, R.W. Davies. 2004. Annelida: Clitellata, Hirudinea, Euhirudinea. In: Yule, C.M. and H.S. Yong (eds.). Freshwater Invertebrates of the Malaysian Region. Kuala Lumpur: Academy of Sciences Malaysia. p. 175-190.
  5. ^ Keegan, H. L., Toshioka, S. and Suzuki, H. 1968. Blood sucking Asian leeches of families Hirudidae and Hemadipsidae. 406th Med. Lab. Spec. Report, July 1968, US Army Medical Command, Japan.
  6. ^ Borda, E., A. Ocequera-Figueroa, M.E. Siddall. 2008. On the classification, evolution and biogeography of terrestrial haemadipsoid leeches (Hirudinida: Arhynchobdellida: Hirudiniformes). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 46. 142-154.
  7. ^ Richardson, R.L. 1975. A contribution to the general zoology of the land leeches (Hirudinoidea: Haemadipsoidea superfam. nov). Acta Zool. Acad. Sci. Hung. 21. 119–152.
  8. ^ Soós, A. 1970. A zoogeographical sketch of the freshwater and terrestrial leeches (Hirudinoidea). Opuse. Zool. (Budapest) 10(2):313-324
edit
  • A video of this unusual leech has been made from a specimen collected from Gabai Falls in 2007.