Agfa (nematode)
Appearance
(Redirected from Agfidae)
Agfa | |
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Nematoda |
Class: | Chromadorea |
Order: | Rhabditida |
Family: | Agfidae |
Genus: | Agfa Chitwood, 1935[1] |
Synonyms | |
Leptodera Dujardin, 1844 |
Agfa is the only genus in the parasitic nematode family Agfidae. There are only three known species: Agfa flexilis, A. morandi and A. tauricus. They are all obligate parasites in terrestrial gastropods.
Species
[edit]- Agfa flexilis (Dujardin, 1845)[2]
- Agfa morandi Ribas & Casanova, 2002[3]
- Agfa tauricus Korol & Spiridonov, 1991[4]
References
[edit]- ^ Chitwood (1935). Proc. Helminth. Soc. Washington 2: 53.
- ^ Dujardin F. (1845). Histoire naturelle des helminthes ou vers intestinaux. xvi, 654+15 pp. Page 109. + Plates: plate 4, figure A. (not plate 6)
- ^ Ribas A. & Casanova J. (2002). "Agfa morandi sp. n. (Rhabditida, Agfidae) a parasite of Limax sp. (Gastropoda, Limacidae)". Parasitology Research 88(8): 745-747. doi:10.1007/s00436-002-0660-1.
- ^ Korol E. N. & Spiridonov S. E. (1991). "Angiostoma kimmeriensis sp. n. and Agfa tauricus sp. n.—parasitic Rhabditida (Nematoda) from Crimean terrestrial mollusks". Helminthologica 28: 179–182.