Armascirus, Den Heyer, 1978

Heyer, Jacob Den & Castro, Tatiane Marie Martins Gomes De, 2012, New Neotropical cunaxine species (Acari: Prostigmata: Cunaxidae), Zootaxa 3265, pp. 22-42 : 23

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.280740

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6177412

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D19D51-FF80-FFB8-6BD1-FDC7FB74F8EF

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Armascirus
status

 

Genus ARMASCIRUS Den Heyer, 1978

Scirus Kramer 1881: 433 –435; Berlese 1888a: 48.10 & 1888b: 188;

Banks 1894: 220 & 1907: 597; Trägårdh 1910: 481–482.

Cunaxa Thor 1912: 389 ; Banks 1914: 55; Schweizer 1922:81; Vitzthum 1925: 66–68 & 1929: 60; Womersley 1933: 111; Thor & Willmann 1941:168 –170; Baker & Hoffmann 1948: 232–233; Schweizer & Bader 1963: 250; Shiba 1969: 91 –92; Ghilarov 1978: 146 –147; Tseng 1980: 257.

Armascirus Den Heyer 1978: 217 –239; Corpuz-Raros 1995: 160 –166; Smiley 1992: 137 –152; Bashir et al 2008:

115–127; Kaluz 2009: 27–40.

Dactyloscirus Chaudhri et al. 1979: 179 ; Michocka 1982: 328 & 1987: 95–97; Smiley 1992: 216 –221, 224–226, 228–230,

246–247.

Indocunaxa Gupta & Ghosh 1980: 193 –194.

Type species: Armascirus huyssteeni Den Heyer, 1978

Den Heyer (1978) provided an historical overview as well as detailed descriptions and figures of species (and their developmental stages) belonging to this genus. Many new species have been added since then ( Michocka 1982; Smiley 1992; Bashir et al. 2008; Corpus-Raros 2008; Kaluz 2009) but most of these authors failed to provide very detailed figures, especially of the legs; in some cases the differences between st-setae and solenidia on the legs cannot be recognized; in other instances ( Bashir et al. 2008) tritonymphs & deutonymphs are described as females. Sexual dimorphism in adult Cunaxidae is a recognized phenomenon. Males are usually smaller than females and show differences in the forms of a large range of setae, body shields and genital features. Dimorphism in specific cunaxid developmental stages has been reported by Den Heyer (1979: in Coleoscirus tuberculatus ; 1980: in Neocunaxoides rykei , N. lajumensis and N. zuluensis ). This phenomenon seems to be the furthest manifested in the genus Armascirus . The female and male palps of most other genera are fairly uniform anatomically and differ mainly in size. In this genus it becomes very difficult to bring the male features in correlation with those of the female. The only criterion to determine sexual connection is by geographical data, that is, that males and females from the same sample can be regarded as of being of the same species (yet this is not always a valid assumption). Any other method, except perhaps DNA tests, is in most cases pure guess work.

The females in the studied Neotropical collection exhibit four “sizes” of dorsal hysterosomal shields, viz. very small and lacking setae, small and carrying setae d1, large and carrying setae d1 and nearly reaching setae e1, and very large carrying setae d1 and e1. The males associated with these four types of females, however, can be placed into only two groups. The samples containing females with a very large hysterosomal shield did not yield any males. Only one male was associated with females having a very small hysterosomal shield; this male, however, shows a typical chaetotaxy of the specimen from Piracicaba. All males studied fall only into two groups, viz. those with genua III- IV with ordinary 1 asl – 2 asl, as opposed to those with genua III–IV with 1 stout bsl – 1 stout bsl, 1 asl (see Figs 27–30 View FIGURES 26 – 30 ). Having discussed all the above, this paper will deal with only two new Armascirus spp., being fully aware that the above-mentioned collection may represent more than these two species.

DNA

Department of Natural Resources, Environment, The Arts and Sport

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Prostigmata

Family

Cunaxidae

Loc

Armascirus

Heyer, Jacob Den & Castro, Tatiane Marie Martins Gomes De 2012
2012
Loc

Indocunaxa

Gupta 1980: 193
1980
Loc

Dactyloscirus Chaudhri et al. 1979 : 179

Smiley 1992: 216
Michocka 1982: 328
Chaudhri 1979: 179
1979
Loc

Armascirus

Corpuz-Raros 1995: 160
Smiley 1992: 137
Den 1978: 217
1978
Loc

Cunaxa

Tseng 1980: 257
Ghilarov 1978: 146
Shiba 1969: 91
Schweizer 1963: 250
Thor 1941: 168
Womersley 1933: 111
Schweizer 1922: 81
Banks 1914: 55
Thor 1912: 389
1912
Loc

Scirus

Kramer 1881: 433
1881
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