Amblyseius meridionalis Berlese, 1914

CălugărK, Adina, StathakisK, Theodoros & Papadoulis, Georgios Th., 2023, Predatory mites of the family Phytoseiidae (Acari: Mesostigmata) in Danube Delta Biosphere Reserve (Romania), Acarologia 63 (1), pp. 58-66 : 60

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.24349/w9fc-x845

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D6BB11-CE62-8567-FE74-FC667242F96F

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Amblyseius meridionalis Berlese, 1914
status

 

Amblyseius meridionalis Berlese, 1914 View in CoL View at ENA

Material examined — Letea-Hăşmacul Mare, forest (11 May 2016) 2 ♀♀ leg. Ivan, ICBI, Pardina, Populus alba plantation (30 June 2021) 4 ♀♀ leg. Ivan, ICBI.

Length of setae — j1 23 (20–25), j3 47 (45–48), j4-j6, J2, J5, z2-z5, Z1, S2, S4, S5, R 1 (minute), Z4 97 (93–100), Z5 147 (145–150), s4 58 (55–63), r3 12.

World distribution — Algeria, Canada - British Columbia, Ontario, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Moldova, Azerbaijan, Morocco, Poland, Russia - Tyumen, Spain, Switzerland, Tunisia, Turkey, Ukraine, USA - Michigan ( Demite et al. 2022)

and Romania (this study).

Hosts / Substrates — On moss, litter under Juniperus spp. (Cupressaceae) , Thymus spp. (Lamiaceae) , Achillea spp. (Asteraceae) , Androsace spp. (Primulaceae) , Poaceae , Senecio spp. (Asteraceae) , unidentified plant ( Papadoulis et al. 2009), humus, soil, Hyparrhenia hirta (L.) Stapf. ( Poaceae ) ( Demite et al. 2022).

Previously, in Romania A. meridionalis was reported from moss samples (bark moss, rock moss and soil moss) taken from mature (over 80 years) natural forests located between 378 and 1445 m a.s.l. ( Manu et al. 2018a).

Remarks — Although A. meridionalis is mentioned as resistant to dry habitats such as agro-ecosystems, dunes or inland meadows ( Manu et al. 2018b), in our study it was found only in forest ecosystems. Morphological characters of the examined specimens fit well with those of the redescription of Döker et al. (2020). At Romanian specimens of A. meridionalis fixed digit have four teeth (three of them are minute, and one bigger next pilus to dentilis), movable digit edentate. The length of setae is smaller than that of Turkish individuals and closer to that of Amblyseius meridionalis sensu Livshitz & Kuznetsov (1972) ( Döker et al. 2020).

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

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