Donjohnstonella subalpina (Paschoal, 1982)

Walter, David Evans, 2009, Genera of Gymnodamaeidae (Acari: Oribatida: Plateremaeoidea) of Canada, with notes on some nomenclatorial problems, Zootaxa 2206, pp. 23-44 : 31-32

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.189740

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6223012

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039F612D-FFB4-FA7B-40AA-D03BFAE1FCF4

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Donjohnstonella subalpina (Paschoal, 1982)
status

 

Donjohnstonella subalpina (Paschoal, 1982)

(Figs. 15–16)

Material examined: USA, WASHINGTON: Holotype (see Comments) female ex subalpine fir litter, Mt Rainier, WA, 6.vii.1973, NGN1, 0 0 7806, OSAL 0 0 81533.

Comments: In Paschoal & Johnston (1982), Paschoal named “ Johnstonella subalpina Paschoal n. gen., s. [sic] sp.” (p. 450), along with diagnostic characters; thus establishing this genus and species. The name Johnstonella , however, is pre-occupied by the tomopterid polychaete genus Johnstonella Gosse, 1853 (often now treated as a subgenus of Tomopteris Eschscholtz ). In order to retain the meaning of the original author, i.e. to name the genus in honor of Donald E. Johnston, I propose the replacement name Donjohnstonella. As noted above, since the tritonymph of Gymnodamaeus meyeri Bayartogtokh & Schatz expresses both seta h 3 and lp, the identity of the extra notogastral seta in D. subalpina is unclear, but I am using h 3.

Paschoal (1983d) reported the holotype to be a male, but the labelled holotype specimen from OSAL examined is a dorsally mounted female with a distinct ovipositor. Presumably this is typographical error, since the only paratype female reported is in the author’s collection in Brazil. This specimen appears to be infected with a parasitic microorganism, oval to circular (5–9 long) with hyaline halo (~1 thick) and darker, granulate core. Three gut boli composed of dark fungal mycelium are present. Donjohnstonella subalpina is known from three mites collected from subalpine fir litter on Mt Rainier in Washington, USA ( Paschoal 1983d) and is not yet known to occur in Canada. Subías (2004) considers D. subalpina to be a species of Gymnodamaeus , but it can be separated from that genus by the presence of seta h 3 on the notogaster (as in some Plateremaeidae ), 3 setae on femur IV (2 in Gymnodamaeus s.s.), the lack of a ridge connecting the apophysis bearing the interlamellar seta to the bothridium, the tooth on the posterior rim of the bothridium (Fig. 15), the bullet-shaped cerotegument (Fig. 16 vs Fig. 3 View FIGURES 1 – 8 ), and the lack of a nipple-like tubercle between setae h 1.

OSAL

Ohio State University Acarology Laboratory

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