Fortuyniidae

Pfingstl, Tobias & Schuster, Reinhart, 2012, First record of the littoral genus Alismobates (Acari: Oribatida) from the Atlantic ocean, with a redefinition of the family Fortuyniidae based on adult and juvenile morphology, Zootaxa 3301, pp. 1-33 : 32

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.210142

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5662491

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B47E87BB-7218-3663-28DA-FD0A58ABC737

treatment provided by

Plazi (2016-04-12 16:24:46, last updated 2024-11-29 16:51:16)

scientific name

Fortuyniidae
status

 

Biogeography of Fortuyniidae View in CoL

Schuster (1983, 1989) already supposed a transoceanic distribution of the family Fortuyniidae and several years later his assumption was finally confirmed when F. atlantica from the coasts of Bermuda was officially described ( Krisper & Schuster 2008). Adding this last Atlantic record to the other known occurrences on coasts of the Indian and Pacific Ocean ( Schuster 1989; Bayartogtokh et al. 2009), the diverse genus Fortuynia now exhibits a worldwide pan- and subtropic distribution. ( Figure 21 View FIGURE 21 )

The less species rich genus Alismobates and the monotypic Circellobates , on the other hand, were found only in a very limited geographic range of the East China Sea, with records of A. rotundus and C. venustus from Hong Kong ( Luxton 1992) and A. reticulatus from Hong Kong ( Luxton 1992) and the Japanese Ryukyu Islands ( Karasawa & Hiji 2004; Karasawa & Aoki 2005). The present discovery of a third Alismobates species on the shores of the Atlantic archipelago of Bermuda expands the geographic distribution of this genus enormously but leaves a large gap in the eastern part of the Pacific Ocean. Quite possibly further islands of the Pacific region, the Pacific as well as the Atlantic coastline of Central America and several Caribbean Islands may have been successfully colonized by this taxon but insufficient sampling within these areas may be responsible for the apparently discontinuous distribution pattern.

At present the new species A. inexpectatus was only recorded from the archipelago of Bermuda, but here it can be found at many localities along the coastline ( Figure 22 View FIGURE 22 ) inhabiting predominantly mats of the alga Bostrychia tenella growing on rocks in the littoral zone.

Although this species, as well as F. atlantica , may be restricted to Bermuda, their endemic status should only be regarded as provisional until the intertidal mite fauna of Central American coasts and the Caribbean Sea are investigated in a more comprehensive way and further distributions of these species can be definitely excluded.

(A sampling excursion to some of these areas will be performed by one of the authors in the near future and is supposed to give further insights into the distribution of these taxa)

Bayartogtokh, B., Chatterjee, T., Chan, B. K. K. & Ingole, B. (2009) New Species of Marine Littoral Mites (Acari: Oribatida) from Taiwan and India, with a Key to the World´s Species of Fortuynia and Notes on Their Distributions. Zoological Studies, 48, 243 - 261.

Karasawa, S. & Hijii, N. (2004) Morphological modifications among oribatid mites (Acari: Oribatida) in relation to habitat differentiation in mangrove forests. Pedobiologia, 48, 383 - 394.

Karasawa, S. & Aoki J. (2005) Oribatid Mites (Arachnida: Acari: Oribatida) from the Marine Littoral of the Ryukyu Archipelago, Southwestern Japan. Species Diversity, 10, 209 - 233.

Krisper, G. & Schuster, R. (2008) Fortuynia atlantica sp. nov., a thalassobiontic oribatid mite from the rocky coast of the Bermuda Islands (Acari: Oribatida: Fortuyniidae). Annales Zoologici, 58, 419 - 432.

Luxton, M. (1992) Oribatid mites from the marine littoral of Hong Kong (Acari: Cryptostigmata). In: Morton, B. (Ed.). The marine flora and fauna of Hong Kong and southern China III. Proceedings of the Fourth International marine Biological Workshop: The marine Flora and Fauna of Hong Kong and Southern China. Hong Kong University Press, pp. 211 - 227.

Schuster, R. (1983) The air-breathing intertidal fauna of Bermuda. Proceedings of the Association of Island Marine Laboratories of the Caribbean, 16, 21.

Schuster, R. (1989) Transoceanic distribution of air-breathing littoral mites. Progress in Acarology, 1, 355 - 362.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 21. Geographical distribution of the family Fortuyniidae. Circles = Fortuynia, squares = Alismobates, trapezoid = Circellobates, black circle = Fortuyniidae gen. sp.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 22. Distribution of Alismobates inexpectatus on the archipelago of Bermuda. (Collected by T. Pfingstl 2011 and R. Schuster 1977 and 1981)

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Sarcoptiformes

SubOrder

Oribatida

Family

Fortuyniidae

Genus

Alismobates