New species and new records of mites of the family Laelapidae (Acari: Mesostigmata) associated with ants in Iran
Author
Joharchi, Omid
Author
Halliday, Bruce
Author
Saboori, Alireza
Author
Kamali, Karim
text
Zootaxa
2011
2972
22
36
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.202824
16eeec80-abef-4248-acf7-2ab68c9bb3e8
1175-5326
202824
Genus
Pseudoparasitus
Oudemans
Pseudoparasitus
Oudemans, 1902
: 29
.
Type
species
Laelaps meridionalis
G. &
R. Canestrini, 1882
, by original designation.
Diagnosis.
Palp tarsal claw with two large tines and a small third tine; exopodal plate behind coxa IV large and triangular, not fused with peritrematal shields; genital shield large, with 4–5 pairs of setae including two pairs on the surface of the shield; shield without strong Λ-shaped lines; anal shield free; distinct pre-sternal plates present; idiosomal setae usually smooth; chelicera of female chelate-dentate; genu and tibia I normally with three ventral setae, genu II with two ventral setae.
Notes on the genus.
Unfortunately
Oudemans (1902)
did not provide a detailed description of
Pseudoparasitus
or its
type
species. The
type
species,
Laelaps meridionalis
G. &
R. Canestrini, 1882
, is very poorly known. The original description is brief, and both the description and illustrations lack some important details, especially concerning the setae on the genitoventral shield. The species has never been fully re-described, and the
types
have apparently been lost. The brief re-description and illustrations by Berlese (1886) are also very incomplete.
Evans & Till (1966)
considered that
P
.
centralis
Berlese, 1921
might be a synonym of
P
.
meridionalis
. However, this seems unlikely, because the shape of the genitoventral shield in these two species is very different. The genitoventral shield in
P
.
centralis
is very wide, with lateral edges that project beyond the outer margins of coxae IV. In
P
.
meridionalis
, the genitoventral shield is much narrower, as Berlese specifically pointed out when he described
P
.
centralis
. Our concept of the genus is based on that of
Hunter (1966)
and includes all of his species, except that we place
Gymnolaelaps annectans
Womersley, 1955
and
Pseudoparasitus margopilus
Hunter,
1966
in the genus
Gymnolaelaps
, because all the genitoventral setae are on the extreme edges of the genitoventral shield.
Pseudoparasitus
is distinguished from
Gymnolaelaps
by the presence of two pairs of setae on the surface of the genital shield, well inside the edges of the shield. The differences between
Gymnolaelaps
and the other genera discussed here are summarised in
Table 1
.
Pseudoparasitus
is a cosmopolitan genus of about 20 species (
Hunter, 1966
;
Evans & Till, 1966
;
Karg, 1981
,
1989b
). Species of
Pseudoparasitus
are found in soil and litter, often associated with ornamental plants, and in that situation they have been intercepted in quarantine (
Hunter, 1966
).
Nemati
et al
. (2000)
reported four named species from
Iran
under the name
Pseudoparasitus
(
Gymnolaelaps
)
. Of these, we consider that
G
.
vitzthumi
Womersley, 1956
is a species of
Laelaspis
, and
Hypoaspis hospes
Berlese, 1923
,
G
.
australicus
Womersley, 1956
and
Laelaps myrmophilus
Michael, 1891
all belong to
Gymnolaelaps
as a separate genus.
Fathipour (1994)
reported the Neotropical species
P
.
porulatus
Karg, 1989b
from
Iran
, and this record was catalogued by
Kamali
et al
. (2001)
. The description of this species in
Fathipour (1994)
refers to four pairs of setae on the genital shield, but the accompanying illustration shows only three. Unfortunately those specimens have now been lost, so these observations can not be confirmed. In view of the ambiguity in the description, we believe that record is probably a misidentification of some other species.