Revision of Fenestrobates (Acari, Oribatellidae) with description of F. marauni sp. nov., from South America, and new diagnosis for Oribatellidae
Author
Ermilov, Sergey G.
Tyumen State University, Tyumen, Russia 625003. E-mail: ermilovacari @ yandex. ru
Author
Behan-Pelletier, Valerie M.
Invertebrate Biodiversity Program, Research Branch, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, K. W. Neatby Bldg., Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K 1 A 0 C 6. E-mail: Valerie. behan-pelletier @ agr. gc. ca
text
Zootaxa
2014
2014-07-03
3827
2
258
272
journal article
5318
10.11646/zootaxa.3827.2.7
bc9e21fb-d9df-44fa-a329-c0557fa713d3
1175-5326
4920524
C3BBEA41-3032-4366-B31E-F4AD8E0AA672
Oribatellidae
Jacot, 1925
Diagnosis.
Adult
. Poronotic
Brachypylina
with the following character states.
Prodorsum
. Lamellae long, broad, with large cusps, medially converging, diverging or contiguous; cusps with or without medial and lateral dentes; translamella variable in width and depth, with or without medial tooth, or translamella absent. Bothridium flaskshaped with indentation laterally.
Notogaster
. Immovable pteromorphs with small dens anteroventrally. Notogaster anteriorly flattened to convex, with or without ridges lateral of bothridium. Lenticulus present or absent. Pair of cavities on notogaster present or absent. Octotaxic system as four pairs of porose areas or saccules; usually without sexual dimorphism, when present that of male modified, and number of porose areas reduced. Notogaster with 10 to 14 pairs of short to very long setae.
Lateral podosomal and epimeral regions
. Genal tooth subtriangular to subrectangular in shape, with or without dens ventrodistally, with or without ridge ventrally. Tutorium lamelliform, narrow to wide, cusp rectangular or subrectangular, with dentes distally, lying parallel to dorsal contour of prodorsum in lateral aspect, extending or not anterior to insertion of rostral seta, or cusp of tutorium absent. Humerosejugal porose organ
Ah
discrete, expressed as porose area or saccule;
Am
diffuse porose area;
Al
when present expressed as porose area or saccule. Custodium usually present, with short to long, free distal point. Epimeral setal formula 3–1–3–3 or 2(3)–1–3–2 or 3–1–3–2 or 2–1–3–2 or 3–1–2–2; seta
4c
present or absent. Setae
3b, 3c
and sometimes
4b
(
Fenestrobates capucinus
), and
4c
(most species of
Oribatella
) thick, spinous, very long. Pedotectum I large. Ventral depression between pedotectum I and the lateral body wall varying from small Ushaped depression to large flask-shaped pit depending on genus. Pedotectum II with or without blunt tooth posterolaterally or paraxially.
Gnathosoma
. Axillary saccule present at base of palp. Subcapitulum diarthric. Chelicera chelate-dentate, with 2 cheliceral setae; (chelicera elongated in one species of
Oribatella
and
Joelia
). Mentum with or without tectum, with or without recurved ridge distally. Palp setal formula 0–2–1–3–9(+ω) or 0–2–1–3–8(+ω); eupathidium
acm
subequal in length to solenidion, forming double horn with solenidion along length or distally (in
Oribatella quadridentata
Banks 1895
solenidion almost 2.5 × length of
acm
).
Anogenital region
. Six pairs of genital setae. Aggenital seta present or absent. Two pairs anal setae; three pairs adanal setae. Postanal porose area present (data for
Siciliotrichus
Bernini, 1983
unknown).
Legs
monodactylous, heterobidactylous or heterotridactylous. Trochanter III with seta
l’
present or absent; femur III with seta
l’
present or absent; seta
v'
of genua I and II present or absent. Genua I and II with or without small cusp ventrodistally. Setae
l”
of genua and tibiae I and II thicker, more heavily barbed and longer than setae
l’
on these segments. One or two anterodorsal spines present or not on tibia I close to, or between, solenidia
φ
1
and
φ
2
.
Immature.
Apopheredermous, with scalps of preceding instar maintained away from dorsal integument by modified setae
da
and dorsally directed
h
1
(
Oribatella
), or modified setae
da
and dorsally directed setae
dp
and
c
1
(
Ophidiotrichus
). Setae
da
usually showing modification for attachment of scalp of preceding instar, may be serpentine in shape with flattened tip (
Ophidiotrichus
). Axillary saccule present, where investigated. Body usually colorless, cuticle without plicae; hysterosomal sclerites present or absent. Gastronotal setation usually unideficient; larva with 11 or 12 pairs, protonymph with 14 or 15 pairs, deutonymph and tritonymph with 13 or 15 pairs. Setae
dm
and
dp
subequal in length to
da
in all immatures, or much shorter than
da
in deutonymph and tritonymph, or
dm
and
dp
(one species), or
c
1
and
dm
(one species) absent from deutonymph and tritonymph. Pair of humeral organs present laterally in sejugal region. Without apodemato-acetabular tracheal system or porose homologues. Paraprocts atrichous in larva, protonymph and deutonymph. Genital setal formula (larva to adult): 0–1–3–5–6. Aggenital setal formula 0–0–1–1–1, or aggenital seta absent. Opisthonotal gland present in all instars. Cupule development normal. Bothridium and bothridial seta fully formed in all instars. Setation of protonymphal leg IV normal (0–0–0–0–7). Larva to deutonymph with circular line of dehiscence, such that dorsal scalp separates from ventral piece at ecdysis.
Remarks.
The adult diagnosis given is based on that of
Grandjean (1953
b
)
, the extensive research of
Bernini (1975
,
1978
,
1983
) publications by
Shtanchaeva & Subías (2009)
,
Behan-Pelletier (2011
, 2013),
Behan-Pelletier & Walter (2012)
,
Ermilov & Anichkin (2012)
and
Seniczak & Seniczak (2013)
.
The immature diagnosis is mainly based on immatures of
Oribatella
and
Ophidiotrichus
. Immatures of
Ophidiotrichus tectus
(
Michael, 1884
)
were described by
Grandjean (1953b)
. Immatures of
Fenestrobates
and other oribatellid genera,
Fberninia
,
Ferolocella
,
Siciliotrichus
are unknown, but the presumed deutonymph of
Joelia fiorii
(
Coggi, 1898
)
was described by
Grandjean (1956
b
)
. The seminal paper by
Grandjean (1953
a
)
on immatures of
O. calcarata
(C.L.
Koch, 1835
)
is the framework for any evaluation of oribatellid immatures, which, as
Behan-Pelletier and Walter (2012)
noted, continue to surprise in their variation. For example,
Seniczak and Seniczak (2013)
describe immatures of
Oribatella calcarata
that do not bear scalps. Furthermore, some nymphs they examined lacked notogastral setae
c
1
and
dm
.
Ignorance of immatures of most oribatellid genera undoubtedly contributes to disagreement in the literature as to the number of genera that should be included in
Oribatellidae
, for example,
Schatz
et al.
(2011
; 10 genera) and
Subías (2014
; 8 genera).
Subías (2014)
included
Cuspidozetes
Hammer, 1962
,
Ferolocella
Grabowski, 1971
,
Joelia
Oudemans, 1906
,
Novoribatella
Engelbrecht, 1986
,
Ophidiotrichus
Grandjean, 1953
,
Oribatella
,
Prionoribatella
Aoki, 1975
and
Siciliotrichus
Bernini, 1983
.
Fberninia
Özdikmen, 2008
and
Fenestrobates
are considered subgenera of
Oribatella
by
Subías (2014)
, though we treat them as genera, herein. Overall we follow Subías’ (2014) concepts with the following reservations.
We consider
Cuspidozetes
a member of
Ceratozetidae
.
Hammer (1962)
noted that femora I and II of the
type
species,
C. armatus
Hammer, 1962
, are similar to those of
Melanozetes
and
Fuscozetes
. Furthermore, her illustration of tibia and tarsus I of this species shows a setiform seta
l”
, whereas this seta is spinous in all genera of
Oribatellidae
.
Aoki (1975)
described
Prionoribatella
as being similar to
Oribatella
but with: the lamellar cusp having a small inner tooth and a large and broad outer tooth; lamellar seta inserted closer to the inner tooth; legs monodactylous; and the rostrum pointed, without incisions. These characters states have been found in other species of
Oribatella
(
Behan-Pelletier 2011
,
Shtanchaeva & Subías 2009
), and we consider
Prionoribatella
a subgenus of
Oribatella
.
Engelbrecht (1986)
proposed
Novoribatella
with
Tectoribates transcriptus
Mahunka, 1985
as
type
species, and described three additional species, all well illustrated. None shows the ventral depression between pedotectum I and the lateral body wall, the character state that is a distinct apomorphy for
Oribatellidae
. Species of
Novoribatella
have a morphology closely related to that of
Tectoribates
, recently revised for North America by
Behan-Pelletier and Walter (2013)
. It is possible that
Novoribatella
is also a member of the
Tegoribatidae
, as has been proposed by the latter authors for
Tectoribates
.