Abstract
Acanthocephalans of the genus Rhadinorhynchus parasitize various marine fishes worldwide. However, the true diversity of Rhadinorhynchus is still unclear. In this study, we found an example of phenotypic variation in trunk spines of the poorly known rhadinorhynchid species R. cololabis Laurs & McCauley, 1964. According to the number and distribution of trunk spines, the present specimens of R. cololabis can be divided into two distinct morphotypes, which may erroneously be recognized as distinct taxa in the absence of molecular data. However, the Assemble Species by Automatic Partitioning (ASAP) and Bayesian inference (BI) analyses based on different nuclear and mitochondrial sequence data, all confirm that the two distinct morphotypes are conspecific, and do not represent two separate genetic lineages. Our ASAP and BI results of cox1 data also suggest that is R. villalobosi Martínez-Flores et al., 2025 is a synonym of R. trachinoti Grano-Maldonado et al., 2025, and challenge the validity of R. dorsoventrospinosus Amin et al., 2011, and R. hiansi Soota & Bhattacharya, 1981. The present findings also indicate that the number and distribution of trunk spines vary markedly in some species of Rhadinorhynchus, and care must be taken when differentiating Rhadinorhynchus species based on this feature. Additionally, the complete mitogenome of R. cololabis is presented for the first time, which has only 13,567 bp, and displays a very high level of similarity with the mitogenome of R. laterospinosus in both nucleotide sequences (94.6%) and amino acid sequences of 12 protein-coding genes (93.8%). However, comparative mitogenomics support R. cololabis and R. laterospinosus representing two separate taxa.