# ﻿Identification of Sindiplozoon coreius (Monogenea, Diplozoidae) and morphological characteristics of the various developmental stages

**Authors:** Lu Shen, Zhuo-Yu Zhao, Ting Jiang, Jun-Dong Xu, Han-Ji Tian, Yao-Yue He, Ting Jia, Wei-Jiang Xu, Fei-Yan Meng, Li-Xian Fan

PMC · DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.1258.162589 · ZooKeys · 2025-11-03

## TL;DR

This paper describes the life cycle and developmental stages of the fish parasite Sindiplozoon coreius for the first time, using both morphological and molecular methods.

## Contribution

The first detailed description of the developmental stages and morphological characteristics of Sindiplozoon coreius is provided.

## Key findings

- Five developmental stages of Sindiplozoon coreius were identified and characterized.
- Morphometric analysis showed significant growth in the central hook and body structures during development.
- Clamps reached maximum maturity in the adult stage, confirming developmental progression.

## Abstract

Diplozoids are ectoparasites that mainly infect the gills of freshwater fish. While the life cycles of Eudiplozoon
nipponicum (Goto, 1891) Khotenovsky, 1985 and some Paradiplozoon Achmerov, 1974 species are documented, Sindiplozoon Khotenovsky, 1981, development remains unclear. During a survey of fish parasites, diplozoids were collected from the predatory carp, Chanodichthys
erythropterus Basilewsky, 1855, in the Lancang River and cultured Kanglang fish, Anabarilius
graham Regan, 1908, in Kunming. Morphological and molecular methods confirmed all specimens as Sindiplozoon
coreius Cao, 2022, and five developmental stages with their typical features were observed through morphological observations: oval egg with filament; ciliated oncomiracidium with hooks and one pair of clamps; diporpa with additional clamps; X-shaped juvenile with developing clamps; and adult with complete clamps and mature reproductive system. Morphometric analysis showed the central hook grew significantly during the transition from oncomiracidium to diporpa (p < 0.001). The buccal sucker, pharynx, and body length increased notably from juvenile to adult (p < 0.001). Clamps developed steadily throughout the life cycle, reaching maximum maturity at the adult stage. This is the first detailed description of S.
coreius development, confirming species identity and expanding its known host range and distribution.

﻿Graphical Abstract

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Chanodichthys erythropterus (taxon 933992)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Eudiplozoon nipponicum (species) [taxon 116851], Actinopterygii (fishes, superclass) [taxon 7898], Chanodichthys erythropterus (common skygazer, species) [taxon 933992]

## Full text

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## Figures

14 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12603642/full.md

## References

39 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12603642/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12603642