Occurrence of Metacaligus rufus ( Wilson , 1908 ) ( Copepoda , Caligidae ) parasitizing the cownose ray Rhinoptera bonasus ( Mitchill , 1815 ) ( Elasmobranchii , Myliobatidae ) in Brazil

aNúcleo de Pesquisa e Desenvolvimento do Litoral Norte, Instituto de Pesca, Av. Cais do Porto, 2275, CEP 11680-000, Ubatuba, SP, Brazil bCurso de Pós-graduação em Biologia Animal, Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro – UFRRJ, Rodovia BR 465, Km 07, s/n, Zona Rural, CEP 23890-000, Seropédica, RJ, Brazil cDepartamento de Parasitologia Animal, Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro – UFRRJ, Rodovia BR 465, Km 07, s/n, Zona Rural, CEP 23890-000, Seropédica, RJ, Brazil

The Cownose ray Rhinoptera bonasus (Mitchill, 1815) (Myliobatidae) is an oceanic species found occasionally in sandy bottoms near the coast, feeding a variety number of bivalve mollusks and other benthic prey (Figueiredo, 1977;Froese and Pauly, 2016).This species is widely distributed in the Atlantic Ocean, found in the Western Atlantic: northern Florida (USA), throughout the Gulf of Mexico to south Brazil; and in the Eastern Atlantic: Mauritania, Senegal and Guinea (Froese and Pauly, 2016).Among the species of genus Rhinoptera, The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) listed this species as Near Threatened (NT) in relation to the state of conservation (Froese and Pauly, 2016; International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources, 2016).
One specimen of Rhinoptera bonasus (body length 46 cm, weight 6,04kg) was caught in June 2016 in the coast of Ubatuba (23º27'05.4"S,45º02'48.4"W),State of São Paulo, southeastern Brazil.The fish was taken to the Laboratório de Piscicultura Marinha of the Instituto de Pesca de São Paulo, where it was anesthetized by immersion in eugenol K-Dent  60mg/L, diluted alcohol at a ratio of 1:5 (Griffiths, 2000) for monitoring of biometrics values and ectoparasites.After monitoring, collected copepods were fixed and preserved in ethanol (70% GL) and cleared in a drop of 85% lactic acid or lactophenol before examination using a phase-contrast microscope.Specimens were measured intact using an ocular micrometer, dissected and examined according to the wooden slide procedure of Humes and Gooding (1964).Measurements based on six females and six males are given in millimetres, unless otherwise stated, with the range followed by the mean in parentheses.Host identification was based on the key of Figueiredo (1977); the nomenclature and classification are updated according to FishBase (Froese and Pauly, 2016).Voucher specimens of M. rufus are deposited in the Crustacea Collection of the National Museum, Rio de Janeiro (MNRJ No 28601-3♀/28602 -3♂), and of the Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo (MZUSP No 36052 -2♀/36052 -3♂), Brazil.
According to Dojiri and Ho (2013) the genus Metacaligus can be distinguished from other genera within the Caligidae by the absence of sternal furca (Figure 1E), absence of accessory process on terminal spines 2 and 3 on exopodal segment of leg 1, three short plumose setae on inner margin of second exopodal segment of leg 1 and only one outer spine on terminal exopodal segment of leg 2. Although some species of Caligus display one or two characteristics found in the genus Metacaligus, however, the presence of all features above mentioned, support Metacaligus as a validly genus (Boxshall and Halsey, 2004;Dojiri and Ho, 2013).
Metacaligus rufus was originally described by Wilson (1908) from Bagre marinus (Mitchill, 1815) in Beaufort (USA), and since its description this species has been recorded parasitizing hosts of the families Ariidae, Carangidae, Merlucciidae, Sciaenidae, Scombridae and Trichiuridae (Luque and Tavares, 2007;Suárez-Morales et al., 2012;Luque et al., 2013).The probable dissemination of this caligid copepod on the elasmobranch host occurred through the B. marinus that occurs in some regions with R. bonasus, inhabiting over mud and sandy bottoms of the coast of Gulf of Mexico, Cuba, western margin of the Caribbean, and the northern margin of South America (Robins and Ray, 1986;Froese and Pauly, 2016).
Records of parasitic copepods on elasmobranch fishes in Brazil are scarce, and today of the 211 known species copepods found to parasite fishes in the Brazilian coast, only 16 have been reported from cartilaginous fishes, accounting for 10% of the total (Luque et al., 2013;Paschoal et al., 2016;Taborda et al., 2016).To date, there are no previous records of parasitic copepods on the cownose ray, for this in the present paper we documented the first record of a caligid copepod on R. bonasus, and the first occurrence of M. rufus parasitizing an elasmobranch host into world's oceans.