Eriophyoid mites (Acari: Eriophyoidea) on Brassicaceae: a new species of Metaculus from Turkey and remarks on other species associated with brassicaceous plants
Author
Monfreda, Rosita
Author
Lillo, Enrico De
text
Zootaxa
2012
3154
47
60
journal article
45699
10.5281/zenodo.210175
1ce84764-2afc-4e33-9aab-e8191b52ae84
1175-5326
210175
1.
Aceria capsellae
(Nalepa 1890)
Nalepa 1890a—
Anz. kais. Akad. Wiss., Math-Natur Kl
., Wien, 27(1): 2 (nomen nudum); Nalepa 1890b—
Sitzb. kaiser. Akad. Wiss. Math.-Naturwiss.,
Wien, 99(2): 66 no. 23 (nomen nudum);
Nalepa 1891
—
Nova Acta Leop. Akad.
, 55(6): 371–373 (no fig.).
Type
data.
Capsella bursa-pastoris
(L.) Medik. (=
C. Bursa pastoris
Mönch. as reported by
Nalepa 1890a
;
1929
), Chinese cress, shepherd's purse; collection locality was not stated by the author even though
Austria
is presumed.
General distribution
. Palaearctic (presumed to be only
Austria
).
Relation to the host
. This mite was associated with the deformation of flowers.
Remarks
. No morphological description is available for this species. Most reports consist of catalogue citations. However,
Nalepa (1891)
compared plant deformation and mites, and established that the flower abnormalities on
Camelina sativa
(L.) Crantz,
Capsella bursa-pastoris
,
Cardaria draba
(L.) Desv. (originally listed as
Lepidium draba
L.) and
Descurainia sophia
(L.) Webb ex Prantl (originally listed as
Sisymbrium sophia
L.), were caused by the same mite or, at most, its varieties. On the basis of quite clear morphological differences in mite populations, Nalepa linked
Aceria longior
to
C. sativa
and
D. sophia
;
A. longior
var.
capsellae
to
C. bursa-pastoris
and
A. longior
var.
drabae
to
C. draba
. Later,
A. capsellae
was made a junior synonym of
A. drabae
(
Nalepa 1898
;
1929
).
Amrine and Stasny (1994)
elevated this species name to the rank of species but they were doubtful about the real taxonomic status of
A. capsellae
. Without any further details allowing for the clear characterisation of this species, its synonymy with
A. drabae
was continued in the Fauna Europaea checklist by de
Lillo (2004)
.