Typhlodromus (Anthoseius) recki Wainstein, 1958

Kreiter, Serge, Amiri, Karima, Douin, Martial, Bohinc, Tanja, Trdan, Stanislav & Tixier, Marie-Stéphane, 2020, Phytoseiid mites of Slovenia (Acari: Mesostigmata): new records and first description of the male ofAmblyseius microorientalis, Acarologia 60 (2), pp. 203-242 : 231-232

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.24349/acarologia/20204364

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FA20102C-186C-4F32-90CA-EFDD21E8DAE2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4527450

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0384D55D-E366-475C-FE28-6183FEC8FDA8

treatment provided by

Felipe (2021-02-04 17:41:44, last updated 2024-11-26 01:07:14)

scientific name

Typhlodromus (Anthoseius) recki Wainstein
status

 

Typhlodromus (Anthoseius) recki Wainstein View in CoL

Typhlodromus recki Wainstein 1958: 203 View in CoL .

Typhlodromus (Typhlodromus) recki, Chant 1959: 62 View in CoL .

Typhlodromella recki, Muma 1961: 299 .

Typhlodromus (Neoseiulus) recki, Ehara 1966: 18 View in CoL .

Anthoseius (Amblydromellus) recki, Kolodochka 1980: 39 View in CoL .

Anthoseius recki, Swirski & Amitai 1982: 58 View in CoL .

Amblydromella recki, Moraes et al. 1986: 171 .

Amblydromella (Aphanoseia) recki, Denmark & Welbourn 2002: 308 .

Typhlodromus (Anthoseius) recki, Ueckermann & Loots 1988: 18 View in CoL , 21; Moraes et al. 2004: 344; Chant & McMurtry 2007: 155.

For same reasons than the previous species, this species belongs to the rhenanus species group.

This species is commonly found in uncultivated areas and sometimes in crops in Europe, mainly on plants of the family Lamiaceae . However, no data on its biology were available until recently. Five populations of this species collected in South of France have been studied. Their abilities to eat Tetranychus urticae as well as their fecundity were assessed in lab experiments. Differences between the five populations have been observed. The fecundity rates (number of eggs/ female/ day) ranges between 0.5 and 1.4. The number of eggs T. of urticae consumed per female and per day ranges between 8 and 18. When the amount of prey is important in first days of the experiment, predation rates higher than 40 eggs consumed per female per day have been observed ( Tixier et al. 2016). The number of prey consumed for some of the populations herein tested is quite similar to those reported for some predatory mite species used in biological control, such as Neoseiulus californicus , for example. Such results emphasize the potential capacity of that species to regulate T. urticae . Furthermore, as this species is endemic of Europe, such results open new insights for using endemic biodiversity to limit side effects of biological control within international exchange rules. However, additional studies are clearly needed to determine optimal rearing conditions, prey ranges and predation behaviour in field conditions ( Tixier et al. 2016).

This is the first mention of that species for the Slovenian fauna.

World distribution: Algeria, Armenia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Caucasus Region, Cyprus, France, Georgia, Greece, Hungary, Iran, Israel, Italy, Kazakhstan, Lebanon, Moldova, Morocco, Portugal, Russia, Syria, Tunisia, Turkey, Ukraine.

Specimens examined: 4 ♀♀ in total. Parecag (aasl 72 m, lat. 45°29’06”N, long. 13°37’41”E), 1 ♀ on Fragaria sp. ( Rosaceae ), 11/VII/2018; Škofljica, Gumnišče 15 (aasl 305 m, lat. 45°58’15”N, long. 14°34’17”E), 1 ♀ on Carpinus betulus L. ( Betulaceae ), 18/VI/2019; Bled, Lake (aasl 478 m, lat. 46°22’4”N, long. 14°05’06”E), 1 ♀ on Ulmus minor L. ( Ulmaceae ), 21/VI/2019; Spodnje Škofije-Purissima (aasl 50 m, lat. 45°34’21”N, long. 13°46’31”E), 1 ♀ on Capsicum annuum L. ( Solanaceae ), 11/VII/2019.

Remarks: The description and measurements of the adult females collected agree with those provided by Ferragut et al. (2010) for specimens from Spain and by Ferragut (2018) for specimens from the Azores Archipelago.

Chant D. A. 1959. Phytoseiid mites (Acarina: Phytoseiidae). Part I. Bionomics of seven species in southeastern England. Part II. A taxonomic review of the family Phytoseiidae, with descriptions of thirty-eight new species. Can. Entomol., 61 (12): 1 - 166. doi: 10.4039 / entm 9112 fv

Chant D. A., McMurtry J. A. 2007. Illustrated keys and diognoses for the genera and subgenera of the Phytoseiidae of the world (Acari: Mesostigmata). Indira Publishing House, West Bloomfield, 219 pp.

Denmark H. A., Welbourn W. C. 2002. Revision of the genera Amblydromella Muma and Anthoseius De Leon (Acari: Phytoseiidae). Intern. J. Acarol., 28 (4): 291 - 316. doi: 10.1080 / 01647950208684308

Ehara S. 1966. A tentative catalogue of predatory mites of Phytoseiidae known from Asia, with descriptions of five new species from Japan. Mushi, 39: 9 - 30.

Ferragut F., Perez Moreno I., Iraola V., Escudero A. 2010. Acaros depredadores em las plantas cultivadas. Familia Phytoseiidae. Ediciones Agrotecnicas, Madrid, 202 pp.

Ferragut F. 2018. New records of phytoseiid mites of the subfamilies Typhlodrominae and Phytoseiinae (Acari: Phytoseiidae) from Spain, with description of a new species and re-description of four species of Typhlodromus Scheuten. Syst. Appl. Acarol., 23 (5): 883 - 910. doi: 10.11158 / saa. 23.5.8

Kolodochka L. A. (1980): New phytoseiid mites (Parasitiformes, Phytoseiidae) from the Moldova SSR, U. S. S. R. Vest. Zool., 4: 39 - 45.

Moraes G. J. de, McMurtry J. A., Denmark H. A. 1986. A catalog of the mite family Phytoseiidae. References to taxonomy, synonymy, distribution and habitat. EMBRAPA - DDT, Brasilia, Brazil, 353 pp.

Moraes G. J. de, McMurtry J. A., Denmark H. A., Campos C. B. 2004. A revised catalog of the mite family Phytoseiidae. Zootaxa, 434: 1 - 494. doi: 10.11646 / zootaxa. 434.1.1

Muma M. H. 1961. Subfamiles, genera, and species of Phytoseiidae (Acarina: Mesostigmata). Fla St. Mus. Bul., 5 (7): 267 - 302.

Swirski E., Amitai S. 1982. Notes on predacious mites (Acarina: Phytoseiidae) from Turkey, with description of the male of Phytoseius echinus Wainstein and Arutunjan. Israel J. Entomol., 16: 55 - 62.

Tixier M. - S., Allam L., Douin M., Kreiter S. 2016. Phytoseiidae (Acari: Mesostigmata) of Morocco: new records, descritpions of five new species, re-descriptions of two species, and key for identification. Zootaxa, 4067 (5): 501 - 551. doi: 10.11646 / zootaxa. 4067.5.1

Ueckermann E. A., Loots G. C. 1988. The African species of the subgenera Anthoseius De Leon and Amblyseius Berlese (Acari: Phytoseiidae). Entomol. Mem., Dep. Agric. Water Supply, Rep. South Africa 73, 168 pp.

Wainstein B. A. 1958. New species of mites of the genus Typhlodromus (Parasitiformes: Phytoseiidae) from Georgia. Soobshcheniya Akademii Nauk Gruzinskoy SSR, 21 (2): 201 - 207 [in Russian].

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Mesostigmata

Family

Phytoseiidae

SubFamily

Typhlodrominae

Tribe

Typhlodromini

Genus

Typhlodromus