Revision of the status of some genus-level water mite taxa in the families Pionidae Thor, 1900, Aturidae Thor, 1900, and Nudomideopsidae Smith, 1990 (Acari: Hydrachnidiae)
Author
Smith, Ian M.
Author
Cook, David R.
Author
Gerecke, Reinhard
text
Zootaxa
2015
3919
1
111
156
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3919.1.6
4c40552e-e778-4d8e-a6b7-9662436cadc2
1175-5326
244587
F711CA99-1B2C-4E18-9F4B-7521D38D2303
Genus
Neoaturus
Lundblad, 1941
Neoaturus
:
Cook, 1974a
, pp. 364–365, figs.
1613–1615
, 1618, 1620.
Neoaturus
:
Cook, 1980
, pp. 293–296, figs. 1517, 1519, 1521, 1523, 1525, 1526, 1528.
Neoaturus
:
Smith
et al
., 2001
, p. 613, fig. 374.
Neoaturus
:
Smith
et al
., 2010
, p. 554, fig. 15.375.
Diagnosis.
Larva
:
Unknown.
Adults
(modified from
Cook 1974a
): Idiosoma elliptical in shape. Idiosomal sclerites with surfaces smooth or finely reticulate. Dorsal and ventral shields fused with one another anteriorly. Dorsal shield bearing six pairs of widely scattered glandularia; lacking well-defined longitudinal ridges; posterior region of shield unmodified. Dorsal furrow lacking glandularia. Fourth coxal plate bearing coxoglandularium II and with a small projection associated with opening for insertion of fourth leg. Ventral shield bearing one pair of glandularia posteriorly; unmodified posteriorly or with a small caudal projection. Genital field terminal and bearing ten to many pairs of acetabula; excretory pore incorporated into dorsal shield; acetabular plates fused with ventral shield with suture lines weakly indicated or obliterated. Third leg of males with distal segments lacking modified setae. Fourth leg of males with distal segments unmodified but bearing several thick setae. Pedipalp with tibia moderately long and slender, lacking a ventral projection and bearing two or three sessile, slender setae distoventrally.
Type
species.
Aturus
(
Subaturus
)
projectus
Lundblad.
Species included.
About ten described species listed by
K.O. Viets (1987)
.
Distribution.
South
America
, southern North
America
as far north as Texas,
USA
.
Discussion.
Cook (1974a)
considered
Neoaturus
to be a distinct genus and
Smith
et al
. (2001
, 2010) followed that treatment, as we do here.