Unionicola Haldeman, 1842

Tuzovskij, Petr V. & Semenchenko, Ksenia A., 2015, Water mites of the genus Unionicola Haldeman, 1842 (Acari, Hydrachnidia, Unionicolidae) in Russia, Zootaxa 3919 (3), pp. 401-456 : 403

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3919.3.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FF49DAFE-EA8E-473B-9F3D-CEB670B4882B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6092177

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039787D2-1948-FFB1-01CF-4FA4FF69FC97

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Unionicola Haldeman, 1842
status

 

Genus Unionicola Haldeman, 1842 View in CoL

Diagnosis (refined after Cook 1974). Adults. Idiosoma typically soft but secondary sclerotization present in a few species; number of idiosomal setae typical for the family Unionicolidae , usually three pairs of setae (Fp, Oi, Pi) not associated with glandularia ( Figs 1A–B View FIGURES 1 A – B ), but in U. ypsilophora only three pairs of setae (Le, Pe, Hv) associated with glandularia; sutures lines between third and fourth coxae usually incomplete obliterated medially; posterior apodemes of anterior coxal groups relatively short; sclerites, bearing setae and glandularia Le, usually larger than sclerites bearing other idiosomal setae; sclerites, bearing seta and glandularium Pe, usually fused with posteromedial margins of fourth coxal plates; basal segments of chelicerae fused medially; pedipalp well sclerotized, P-1 without setae, P-4 usually with three ventral tubercles; gonopore of male terminal or subterminal, never opening in the middle of the dorsum; genital field of females terminal, often with four acetabular plates which bear three pairs of setae medially, occasionally only a single pair of acetabular plates present in female; genital acetabula varying from five pairs to many; excretory pore placed dorsocaudally; I-Leg-2–5 usually armed with large sword setae and without swimming setae; legs II–IV variable with large movable and swimming setae; all legs with claws.

21 species of the genus Unionicola are found in Russia (about 8 % from known numbers of species) therefore we consider to inexpedient in this work the division of the genus on subgenera as it complicates identification of species.

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