Amazonacarus Vázquez, Araújo & Feres, 2014
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3814.2.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:453ACE3C-0977-4F8F-B4A7-3EF93508472B |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5676356 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C7136F78-FFC0-FF97-80E3-FB2DFF23F83F |
treatment provided by |
Plazi (2016-04-12 03:59:50, last updated 2024-11-27 18:59:30) |
scientific name |
Amazonacarus Vázquez, Araújo & Feres |
status |
gen. nov. |
Amazonacarus Vázquez, Araújo & Feres View in CoL n. gen.
Diagnosis. Palp tarsus with 10 foliate setae. Palp tibia with 21–26 elongate, serrate setae, 2–6 of which extend to the base of the claws ( Fig. 10 View FIGURES 9 – 10 ). Preanal segment with 4–6 dorsal and 2 ventro-lateral, setae ( Figs. 15–16 View FIGURES 14 – 16 ). Ovipositor of the “complex type ”, i.e., with 2 pairs of thick, sclerotized spiny projections, a pair of glands connected by long, thin channels, plus 2–4 long, thin, fine, acutely-tipped genital setae visible under cuticle close to genital opening ( Fig. 20 View FIGURES 19 – 20 ). Sensillum with a “crown-like” tip on tarsus I large, distinctly distal to the main group of sensory sensilla ( Fig. 21 View FIGURE 21 ).
Comparative notes. The new genus differs from most Old World genera by the presence of 2 pairs of eyes and With’s organ membranous and discoid (3 pairs of eyes and With’s organ biramous and setiform in Paracarus and Siamacarus ); the absence of setae on the main opisthosomal segments in all instars (with numerous setae in tritonymphs and adults of Panchaetes , Salfacarus and Vanderhammenacarus ) (Hammen 1977; Leclerc 1989); and the presence of setae on the penultimate segment (segment XVII) (absent in Adenacarus ) ( Hammen 1969). It differs from Opilioacarus , Phalangiacarus , Indiacarus , and Neacarus by the presence of more than 7 foliate setae on the palp tarsus ( Grandjean 1936; Das & Bastawade 2007). The presence of many foliate setae on the palp tarsus, each with multiple (>6) thin lobes, and the position of the sensillum with a crown-like tip on tarsus I are shared with Caribeacarus , the genus that is most similar to Amazonacarus . Amazonacarus can be differentiated from that genus by the presence of distinctly modified setae on the palp tibia, the presence of more than 3 setae on the penultimate segment (some undescribed Neacarus from Brazil also have>3 setae on that segment), and the presence of distinct internal sclerites in the ovipositor (all absent in Caribeacarus ). The elongate setae on the palp tibia appear to be unique. They may function to protect the foliate (d - type) setae on the palp tarsus. In Amazonacarus these setae are much longer than positionally similar setae in Caribeacarus or Neocarus ( Figs. 47–53 View FIGURES 47 – 50 View FIGURES 51 – 53. 51 ).
Das, N. P. I. & Bastawade, D. B. (2007) The first report of the acarine suborder Opilioacarida from India, with description of new genus, Indiacarus, and a new species, Indiacarus pratyushi. Acarologia, 47 (1 - 2), 3 - 11.
Grandjean, F. (1936) Un acarien synthetique: Opilioacarus segmentatus With. Bulletin de la Societe d'Histoire Naturelle de l'Afrique du Nord, 27, 413 - 444.
Hammen, L. van der. (1969) Studies on Opilioacarida (Arachnida) III. Opilioacarus platensis Silvestri, and Adenacarus arabicus (With). Zoologische Mededelingen, 44 (8), 114 - 131.
Leclerc, P. (1989) Considerations paleobiogeographiques a propos la decouverte en Thailande d'opilioacariens nouveaux (Acari - Notostigmata). Compte Rendu des Seances de la Societe de Biogeographie, 65 (4), 162 - 174.
FIGURES 9 – 10. Amazonacarus setosus n. sp. Female. 9, palp tarsus, ventral (left) and dorsal (right) view. 10, palp tibia, ventral (left) and dorsal (right) view. Arrows indicate the unique length of this setae group in Opilioacaridae.
FIGURES 14 – 16. Amazonacarus setosus n. sp. 14, anterior view of dorsal shield. Dorsal view of preanal (XVIII segment) and anal segments: 15, female, 16, male (arrows show the dorsal setae on it).
FIGURES 19 – 20. Amazonacarus setosus n. sp. 19, ventral view of male glands (arrows: reel-like structure). 20, female invaginated ovipositor (arrow: genital setae).
FIGURES 47 – 50. Palp tibiotarsus of: 47, Neocarus calakmulensis. 48, Neocarus bajacalifornicus chamelaensis. 49, Neocarus veracruzensis. 50, Caribeacarus armasi. Modified from Vázquez & Klompen (2009).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Parasitiformes |
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