Sergio Guillén-Hernández
Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán
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Featured researches published by Sergio Guillén-Hernández.
Journal of Parasitology | 2008
Juan F. Espínola-Novelo; Sergio Guillén-Hernández
Eight helminth taxa were found parasitizing Chaunus marinus (n = 40) and Cranopsis valliceps (n = 40) from the Parque Estatal Lagunas Yalahau, Yucatan, Mexico. Seven taxa (2 digeneans: Langeronia macrocirra, Mesocoelium monas; 1 acanthocephalan: Oncicola sp.; 3 nematodes: Rhabdias füleborni, Aplectana itzocanensis, Cruzia morleyi; and a nematode larva) were found in C. marinus, while 4 taxa (all nematodes: Rhabdias fuelleborni, Aplectana itzocanensis, Ozwaldocruzia sp., and a nematode larva) were present in C. valliceps. Nematodes, particularly A. iztocanensis, showed high prevalence, mean abundance, and mean intensity values for both species of amphibians. The occurrence of R. fuelleborni, M. monas, L. macrocirra, and C. morleyi in these amphibians from the Yucatan Peninsula confirms their neotropical distribution, while the presence of A. itzocanensis increases its geographical distribution, suggesting a preference by neotropical, rather than neartic areas.
Comparative Parasitology | 2008
Mirza P. Ortega-Olivares; Alfredo O. Barrera-Guzmán; Ivana Haasová; Guillermo Salgado-Maldonado; Sergio Guillén-Hernández; Tomáš Scholz
Abstract A survey of adults of gryporhynchid tapeworms (Cestoda: Cyclophyllidea) from herons and related fish-eating birds (Ciconiiformes: Ardeidae and Threskiornithidae) along the Atlantic coast of Mexico from Tamaulipas to Yucatán is presented, based on the taxonomic evaluation of freshly collected specimens. They belong to the following 16 species (taxa reported as adults from Mexico for the first time are marked with an asterisk): Cyclustera capito (Rudolphi, 1819); Cyclustera ibisae (Schmidt and Bush, 1972); Dendrouterina ardeae (Rausch, 1955); *Dendrouterina (?) fuhrmanni (Clerc, 1906); D. (?) papillifera (Fuhrmann, 1908); *Dendrouterina pilherodiae Mahon, 1956; Glossocercus auritus (Rudolphi, 1819); *Glossocercus caribaensis (Rysavy and Macko, 1973); *Glossocercus cyprinodontis Chandler, 1935; *Glossocercus sp.; Neogryporhynchus cheilancristrotus (Wedl, 1855); *Paradilepis sp.; Parvitaenia cochlearii Coil, 1955; *Valipora campylancristrota (Wedl, 1855); *Valipora minuta (Coil, 1950); and Valipora mutabilis Linton, 1927. Glossocercus cyprinodontis, the type-species of the genus, and Parvitaenia cochlearii are first recorded since their original descriptions (the former species for the first time as an adult tapeworm), and adults of Valipora campylancristrota are reported from the Americas for the first time. Rostellar hooks of all species from different hosts and strobilar morphology of selected taxa are described, and data on the spectrum of definitive hosts, which include numerous new host records, are provided.
Journal of Parasitology | 2015
María G. Velarde-Aguilar; Rosario Mata-López; Sergio Guillén-Hernández; Virginia León-Règagnon
Abstract: Two new species of Parapharyngodon Chatterji, 1933, parasitizing 3 species of hylid frogs (Diaglena spatulata, Triprion petasatus, and Trachycephalus typhonius) from Mexico are described. The 2 new species share the presence of a gubernaculum with Parapharyngodon lamothei and belong to the group of those species with short spicule; both differ from the remaining species of the genus in the papillar pattern on ventrolateral and dorsal lips and in the thickness of cuticular annulations and cuticular ornamentation in the female specimens. These are the third and fourth reports of Parapharyngodon spp. parasitizing hylid frogs. In addition to the egg characteristics, we propose that length of the lateral alae is also a taxonomically relevant feature to differentiate species of the genus. A bibliographic review of all species historically assigned to Parapharyngodon is given, including those that have been declared species inquirenda, or transferred to other genera and those that are considered valid.
Journal of Parasitology | 2011
Hugo H. Mejía-Madrid; Sergio Guillén-Hernández
Abstract Cucullanus mycteropercae n. sp. is described from the intestine of the black grouper, Mycteroperca bonaci Poey, from the northern coast of Yucatán, México. The new species is readily distinguishable from other Cucullanus species because it possesses an ellipsoidal papilla-like structure situated medially on the anterior cloacal lip of males. Other differentiating characters include the variable position of postcloacal pair 8 in males, the subventral position of phasmids, a slightly ventrally hooked posterior end of gubernaculum, and the presence of a large, cylindroconical sclerotized tail end in both sexes. This is the fourth record of a marine cucullanid off the Yucatán Peninsula in México belonging to Cucullanus Müller, 1777.
Diseases of Aquatic Organisms | 2012
Ruth A. Pérez-Campos; Rossanna Rodríguez-Canul; Juan Antonio Pérez-Vega; Carlos González-Salas; Sergio Guillén-Hernández
Between February and June 2010, 113 fiddler crabs Uca spinicarpa were collected from the Chuburna lagoon system on the northern coast of the Yucatan Peninsula, México. Of the 68 crabs gathered outside their burrows, 13 were infected with 25 cystacanths of Hexaglandula corynosoma (intensity of infection from 1 to 5) and the remaining 55 crabs were uninfected. The other 45 crabs were found inside their burrows and only one was found infected with 1 cystacanth of H. corynosoma. Serotonin (5-HT) levels were higher in the group of crabs infected with H. corynosoma in contrast to the group of uninfected crabs and the group of those infected with other parasites. A redundancy analysis corroborated a positive relationship between 5-HT and the intensity of infection with H. corynosoma. In contrast, dopamine levels remained similar among different groups of crabs.
Acta Parasitologica | 2015
Juan F. Espínola-Novelo; Carlos González-Salas; Sergio Guillén-Hernández; Ken MacKenzie
Abstract The black grouper Mycteroperca bonaci is a commercially important fish off the coast of Yucatan, Mexico. To investigate possible differences between parasite communities in two different environments, 60 fish were collected from two areas during 2010 and 2011 and examined for parasites. The fish were classified into two age groups, in each of which the parameters of parasitic infection - prevalence, abundance and intensity - were determined. Parasite faunas were further described at the infracommunity level. Using both univariate (PERMANOVA) and multivariate statistical methods, the values of richness, abundance, diversity and Brillouin evenness as well as the Index values of Bray-Curtis and Jaccard for similarity were calculated and compared. The results of these tests and of CAP discriminant analyses at the two sites showed the existence of two distinct parasite communities. The parasite taxa mainly responsible for the differences were the digeneans Dollfustrema sp., Prosorhynchus spp., Lepidapedoides epinepheli and Hamacreadium mutabile, and the nematode Philometra salgadoi. The potential for some of these parasites to be used as biological tags for stock identification of M. bonaci is discussed.
Diseases of Aquatic Organisms | 2018
Sergio Guillén-Hernández; Carlos González-Salas; D. Pech-Puch; H. Villegas-Hernández
The red octopus Octopus maya Voss et Solís-Ramírez, 1966 is an endemic species and one of the most important fishery resources of the Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico. Due to its economic importance and the fact that in recent years interest in farming this species has increased, several initiatives have been implemented to study its biology and requirements for cultivation. Parasites represent an important component of the biology of the red octopus, as they can have an impact on both wild and cultivated populations. A total of 44 O. maya specimens were sampled from the fishing ports of Ría Lagartos and Dzilam de Bravo, Yucatán; specimens were measured and subsequently subjected to histological analysis of the buccal masses where cestode larvae (Prochristianella sp.) were found in the anterior salivary glands. Results of a chi-squared test showed that specimen size class and infestation levels (parasite abundance) were significantly correlated, with parasite damage levels more pronounced in larger animals. The damage caused to the anterior salivary glands by this parasite could have serious implications for feeding and reproductive success of O. maya.
Systematic Parasitology | 2002
David González-Solís; Nelly Argáez-García; Sergio Guillén-Hernández
Revista Mexicana De Biodiversidad | 2010
Nelly Argáez-García; Sergio Guillén-Hernández; M. Leopoldina Aguirre-Macedo
Revista Mexicana De Biodiversidad | 2008
Alfredo O. Barrera-Guzmán; Sergio Guillén-Hernández