Ascaridina

Ascaridina
Adult Toxocara canis
(Ascaridoidea: Toxocaridae)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Nematoda
Class: Secernentea
Subclass: Spiruria
Order: Ascaridida
Suborder: Ascaridina
Superfamilies

5, see text

The suborder Ascaridina contains the bulk of the Ascaridida, parasitic roundworms with three "lips" on the anterior end. The Ascaridida were formerly placed in the subclass Rhabditia by some, but morphological and DNA sequence data rather unequivocally assigns them to the Spiruria. The Oxyurida and Rhigonematida are occasionally placed in the Ascaridina as superfamily Oxyuroidea, but while they seem indeed to be Spiruria, they are not as close to Ascaris as such a treatment would place them.[1]

These "worms" contain a number of important parasites of humans and domestic animals, namely in the superfamily Ascaridoidea.

Systematics

The Ascaridina contain the following superfamilies and families:[2]

Superfamily Ascaridoidea

Superfamily Cosmocercoidea

Superfamily Heterakoidea

Superfamily Seuratoidea

  • Chitwoodchabaudiidae (disputed)
  • Cucullanidae
  • Quimperiidae
  • Schneidernematidae
  • Seuratidae

Superfamily Subuluroidea

Footnotes

  1. ToL (2002)
  2. ToL (2002), SN2K (2008)

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.