Abstract
Representatives of the genus Camallanus Railliet & Henry, 1915 occur mainly in teleost fishes, although a significant number of species have also been recorded from anuran amphibians. The taxonomy, host range, geographical distribution and phylogenetic relationships of Camallanus spp. from African clawed toads (Xenopus spp.) are reviewed. Besides C. kaapstaadi Southwell & Kirshner, 1937, which shows a widespread distribution in sub-Saharan Africa and occurs in X. laevis subspecies, X. wittei, X. fraseri-like toads, X. borealis and X. muelleri, three new species were found: C. siluranae n. sp. from X. tropicalis in west Africa, C. macrocephalus n. sp. from X. borealis in Kenya, and C. xenopodis n. sp. from X. laevis laevis in South Africa and X. borealis in Kenya. C. johni Yeh, 1960 described from Xenopus sp. in Tanzania is considered a species inquirenda. C. kaapstaadi and C. macrocephalus are very closely related and both occur in the oesophagus of their hosts, unlike other Camallanus spp. which are found in the intestine or more rarely the stomach. Some of the unusual morphological features of these species may be an adaptation to attachment in the oesophagus. The host of C. siluranae, X. tropicalis, belongs to a separate species group (as has been established by recent molecular and cytological studies) to those of C. kaapstaadi, C. macrocephalus and C. xenopodis. Morphological affinities suggest that Camallanus spp. from clawed toads are not monophyletic with those from other amphibians and that C. siluranae is distantly related to, and probably not monophyletic with the remaining species from clawed toads. The Camallanus fauna of Xenopus spp. may thus be derived from at least two independent colonisations, of different host clades, by parasite lineages occurring in teleost fishes.
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Jackson, J., Tinsley, R. Evolutionary relationships, host range and geographical distribution of Camallanus Railliet & Henry, 1915 species (Nematoda: Camallaninae) from clawed toads of the genus Xenopus (Anura: Pipidae). Syst Parasitol 32, 1–21 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00009463
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00009463