. . . "Mendlov\u00E1, Monika" . "Diversity, phylogeny and evolution of cichlid parasites."@en . . . . "Diversity, phylogeny and evolution of cichlid parasites."@en . "131681" . . . "Diversity, phylogeny and evolution of cichlid parasites." . "Vete\u0161n\u00EDkov\u00E1 \u0160imkov\u00E1, Andrea" . "RIV/00216224:14310/12:00066967" . . . . "\u0158ehulkov\u00E1, Eva" . "Cichlidae; Monogenea; diversity; phylogeny; evolution"@en . "African Cichlidae are parasitized by 5 genera of monogeneans (Cichlidogyrus, Scutogyrus, Onchobdella, Enterogyrus and Urogyrus). The study was aimed to investigate (1) the diversity of monogeneans parasitizing African Cichlidae in Senegal, (2) phylogenies of cichlids and their monogeneans, and (3) host-parasite coevolution. A total of 28 species were found on cichlids in Senegal, among them two new species were described (\u0158ehulkov\u00E1 et al., unpublished). Phylogenetic analyses supported the monophyletic origin of the Cichlidogyrus/Scutogyrus group, and suggested that Cichlidogyrus is polyphyletic and Scutogyrus is monophyletic. The phylogeny of Cichlidae supported the separation of mouthbrooders and substrate-brooders and is consistent with the hypothesis that the mouthbrooding behavior of evolved from substrate-brooding behavior. The results of cophylogenetic analyses suggest the parasite duplications and host switches on related cichlid host species (Mendlov\u00E1 et al., 2012)."@en . "RIV/00216224:14310/12:00066967!RIV14-MSM-14310___" . "Diversity, phylogeny and evolution of cichlid parasites." . . "Civ\u00E1\u0148ov\u00E1, Krist\u00EDna" . . . "14310" . "Desdevises, Yves" . . "P(GBP505/12/G112), S" . "5"^^ . . . . . . . "African Cichlidae are parasitized by 5 genera of monogeneans (Cichlidogyrus, Scutogyrus, Onchobdella, Enterogyrus and Urogyrus). The study was aimed to investigate (1) the diversity of monogeneans parasitizing African Cichlidae in Senegal, (2) phylogenies of cichlids and their monogeneans, and (3) host-parasite coevolution. A total of 28 species were found on cichlids in Senegal, among them two new species were described (\u0158ehulkov\u00E1 et al., unpublished). Phylogenetic analyses supported the monophyletic origin of the Cichlidogyrus/Scutogyrus group, and suggested that Cichlidogyrus is polyphyletic and Scutogyrus is monophyletic. The phylogeny of Cichlidae supported the separation of mouthbrooders and substrate-brooders and is consistent with the hypothesis that the mouthbrooding behavior of evolved from substrate-brooding behavior. The results of cophylogenetic analyses suggest the parasite duplications and host switches on related cichlid host species (Mendlov\u00E1 et al., 2012)." . . "[35BD19D3AAA2]" . "4"^^ .