identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03B8D953FFBEAB558C81FF2B87E7FF71.text	03B8D953FFBEAB558C81FF2B87E7FF71.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Dynatozetes Grandjean 1960	<div><p>Genus Dynatozetes Grandjean, 1960</p><p>Type species: Dynatozetes amplus Grandjean, 1960, p. 104 .</p><p>Revised generic diagnosis</p><p>Adult. Mochlozetidae (Grandjean 1960, Norton &amp; Behan-Pelletier 2009). Body large, length more than 700 µm. Integument without ornamentation. Rostrum rounded. Lamella long and broad, cusp short, with one lateral tooth. Translamella and prolamella absent. Sublamella strongly developed. Tutorium ridge-like, with small distal tooth. Rostral, lamellar and interlamellar setae long, setiform, barbed, but in usually absent, represented by alveolus, ro inserted at end of tutorium. Bothridial seta of medium size, clavate to lanceolate, barbed. Pedotecta I and II represented by small lamina. Porose areas Ad, Al, Am and Ah present. Pteromorph well-developed. Dorsophragma and pleurophragma present. Notogaster with five to eight pairs of rounded (sometimes Aa elongate oval) porose areas including anterolateral Aa, dorsomedial A1 and three to six pairs of posteroperipheral areas, Aa not divided. Ten pairs of notogastral setae represented only by alveoli. Posterior margin of notogaster rounded. Axillary saccule on subcapitulum absent. Subcapitular seta well-developed. Custodium, discidium and circumpedal carina present. Epimeral setal formula: 3 - 1 - 3 - 3. Six pairs of genital, one pair of aggenital, two pairs of anal and three pairs of adanal setae, ad 1 in postanal position. Adanal lyrifissure located close to anal plate, paraanal. Marginoventral porose area represented by several round or oblong parts. Porose area on leg femora and trochanters III and IV, in postero-ventral part of leg tarsi and anteroventral part of leg tibiae, and sometimes in dorsal part of leg tarsi I and II well visible. Tarsus I with 20 setae (including l" and o'), seta p on tarsi II- IV with long cilia unilaterally. Sexual dimorphism absent.</p><p>Juvenile instars. Unknown.</p><p>Description</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B8D953FFBEAB558C81FF2B87E7FF71	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Ermilov, Sergey G.;Friedrich, Stefan	Ermilov, Sergey G., Friedrich, Stefan (2017): Contribution to knowledge of the oribatid mite genus Dynatozetes. Spixiana 40 (1): 23-28, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.16898710
03B8D953FFBEAB518EFAFF2B85D8FCEE.text	03B8D953FFBEAB518EFAFF2B85D8FCEE.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Dynatozetes hexaporosus Ermilov 2017	<div><p>Dynatozetes hexaporosus Ermilov spec. nov.</p><p>Figs 1-13</p><p>Diagnosis. Body size: 763-863 × 647-697. Rostrum with small, semi-oval protruding. Rostral, lamellar and interlamellar setae long, setiform, barbed, in longest. Bothridial seta lanceolate, barbed. Eight pairs of porose areas present in typical case including six pairs of posteroperipheral areas, Aa elongate oval. Epimeral seta thin, barbed, anogenital seta indistinctly barbed. Leg trochanter IV with elongate triangular process anterodorsally.Dorsal porose area present on leg tarsi I and II.</p><p>Description</p><p>Measurements. Body length: 763 (holotype: male), 763-863 (four paratypes: two females and five males); notogastral width: 664 (holotype), 647-697 (four paratypes). No clear differences between females and males in the body sizes.</p><p>Integument (Fig. 5). Body colour brown to black-brownish. Surface microporose, lateral side of prodorsum densely microgranulate (diameter of granule up to 1). Pteromorph finely striate.</p><p>Prodorsum (Figs 1-3, 5). Rostrum with small, semi-oval protruding (visible in dorso-frontal view). Rostral (rr) and lateral (prl) ridges present. Lamella (lam), sublamella (slam) and tutorium (tu) longer than half of prodorsum.Lamellar (lt) and tutorial (tt) teeth distinctly developed. Small concavity (con) located near lamella. Sublamellar porose area oval (Al, 20- 28× 16-20). Rostral (ro, 110-131), lamellar (le, 110- 131) and interlamellar (in, 266-274) setae setiform, barbed. Exobothridial seta (ex, 41-49) thin, erect, barbed. Bothridial seta (bs, 110-114) with stalk longer than short, lanceolate, barbed head. Dorsophragma (D) slightly elongated longitudinally. Dorsosejugal porose area (Ad) small, oval (12-16× 4-6), located posterior to each interlamellar seta.</p><p>Notogaster (Figs 1, 4-6). Eight pairs of porose areas present in typical case, Aa elongate oval (49- 65 ×16-20), longitudinally oriented, A1 rounded (28-41), six pairs of posteroperipheral areas (NN1-6) rounded, of these, the first pair (N1) larger (28-36) than other (10-24). Number of posteroperipheral areas sometimes asymmetric (six or five on one side and five or four on other side, respectively). All lyrifissures (ia, im, ip, ips, ih) and opisthonotal gland opening (gla) clearly visible.</p><p>Gnathosoma (Figs 3, 7-9). Subcapitulum longer than wide (196-204 × 147-161). Subcapitular seta setiform, barbed, h and m (both 53-61) longer than a (28-32). Adoral seta (or 1, or 2, 20-22) thickened, densely ciliate. Palp with length 141-149. Postpalpal seta (ep, 6) spiniform, smooth. Chelicera (217-227) with two barbed setae, cha (69-77) longer than chb (49-53). Trägårdh’ s organ (Tg) elongate triangular.</p><p>Epimeral and podosomal regions (Figs 3, 5, 6). Humeral porose area Am diffuse, elongate oval, Ah clearly bordered, band-like. Pedotecta I (Pd I) and II (Pd II) of typical form. Custodium (cus) strong, elongate triangular. Discidium (dis) triangular. Circumpedal carina (cp) connected to cus. Epimeral setae thin, barbed, 1a, 2a and 3a (24-32) shorter than the others (49-57).</p><p>Anogenital region (Figs 3, 4, 6). Genital (g 1 - g 6, 28-36), aggenital (ag, 28-36), anal (an 1, an 2, 16) and adanal (ad 1 - ad 3, 20) setae setiform, thin, indistinctly barbed (visible under high magnification). Adanal lyrifissure (iad) and marginoventral porose area ( Amar) well visible.</p><p>Legs (Figs 10-13). Median claw thicker than laterals, all serrate on dorsal side; lateral claws each with small tooth ventrodistally. Trochanter IV with elongate triangular process (proc) anterodorsally. Dorsal porose area (p.a.) present on tarsi I and II. Alveoli of tibial and genual solenidia without posterior spine. Formulas of leg setation and solenidia: I (1-5-3-4-20) [1-2-2], II (1-5-3-4-15) [1-1-2], III (2-3-1-3-15) [1-1-0], IV (1-2-2-3-12) [0-1-0]; homology of setae and solenidia indicated in Table 1. Solenidia ω 1 on tarsus I, ω 1 and ω 2 on tarsus II and σ on genu III blunt-ended, other solenidia longer, pointed. Famulus minute, slightly swollen distally, inserted posterior to ω 2.</p><p>Material examined. Holotype (male) and four paratypes (two females and two males): see “Material and methods” section.</p><p>Type deposition. The holotype is deposited in the collection of the Museo de Historia Natural, Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Lima, Peru ; one paratype is deposited in the collection of the Bavarian State Collection of Zoology, Munich, Germany ; one paratype is deposited in the collection of the Senckenberg Institute, Görlitz, Germany ; two paratypes are deposited in the collection of the Tyumen State University Museum of Zoology, Tyumen, Russia .</p><p>Etymology. The specific name hexaporosus refers to six pairs of peripheral porose areas on the notogaster.</p><p>Remarks. The distinctive characters of the new species from other Dynatozetes species can be found in the identification key given below.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B8D953FFBEAB518EFAFF2B85D8FCEE	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Ermilov, Sergey G.;Friedrich, Stefan	Ermilov, Sergey G., Friedrich, Stefan (2017): Contribution to knowledge of the oribatid mite genus Dynatozetes. Spixiana 40 (1): 23-28, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.16898710
