Description of a new pterygosomatid mite (Acari, Actinedida: Pterygosomatidae) parasitic on Liolaemus spp. (Iguania: Liolaemini) from Argentina
Author
Cruz, Katharina Dittmar De La
Author
Morando, Mariana
Author
A, Luciano Av I L
text
Zootaxa
2004
521
1
6
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.157535
55ecf828-b2ad-41f4-9515-6765562fda12
11755326
157535
3E579050-C6AB-441B-B9C3-BB2C67CDF965
Pterygosoma patagonica
n. sp.
(
Figs. 1–4
)
Diagnosis
: — Color of specimens dark brown in life. Body shape of both sexes horizontally oval. Dorsal scutum well defined in both sexes.
FIGURES 1–2
.
Pterygosoma patagonica
,
n. sp
.
, female. 1, Dorsal aspect; 2, Apical fold with retrieved gnathosoma.
Female
— (n = 5). Idiosoma: length 483–535 µm, width 640–655 µm.
Gnathosoma Gnathosoma generally recessed into an apical fold (45–55 µm) (
Fig. 2
,
Fig. 4
B).
Dorsum — Dorsal setae located peripherally and of a pectinate appearance, with anterior setae slightly shorter than posterior ones (
Fig. 1
,
Fig. 4
A.). Two pairs of setae placed in quadrangular fashion in posterior median half of dorsum (
Fig. 1
). Rest of median area, as well as venter completely devoid of any setation. Hysterosomal striation transverse.
Scutum — Scutum bearing on average 52 stout, conical, pectinate setae, all considerably shorter (ca. 22 µm) than other dorsal setae (ca. 40 µm) (
Fig 4
B). A pair of conical, somewhat longer setae medianly located, ca. 20 µm from posterior margin of scutum.
Legs — All legs of equal length. Coxae I and II, as well as III and IV fused, respectively. Coxae I/II located ventrally in anterior half of body, coxae III/IV located in posterior part. Coxal plate I/II bearing three nude seta, coxal plate III/IV bearing two nude setae.
Leg chaetotaxy — Leg chaetotaxy as follows (5333) (3322) (3322[1]) (1[2]1 11[0]) (
Fig.3
;
Fig. 4
F).
FIGURE 3
. Chaetotaxy of tibia, genu, femur and trochanter of
Pterygosoma patagonica
n. sp
.. Boxed loci correspond to variation (scheme after Jack, 1964).
TABLE 1
: Tarsal setation of
Pterygosoma patagonica
n. sp.
. Key: “*” setae present as in generalized formula; “ø” absent; ““ not applicable. If setae indicated (e.g. td), then only one of the paired setae present.
Tarsus I Tarsus II Tarsus III Tarsus IV td * td td td tdf * * * * tld * * * * tlm ø ø ø ø tlv * * * * blv * mv mv mv alm ø ø ø ø md * ø ø ø 1 * ø ø ø 2 * ø ø ø
ø * * ø Tarsal setation — Following setae present on all tarsi: terminal dorsal simple setae (td, paired or unpaired); terminal dorsal fanlike setae (tdf, always paired); terminal lateroventral setae (always paired, smooth); basal lateroventral setae (blv, paired or unpaired, feathery). Specification of all setae (td, tdf, tld, tlm, tlv, blv, alm, md, 1, 2,) given in
Table 1
and figure 4E.
FIGURE 4.
Pterygosoma patagonica
n. sp.
;
A
, Dorsal aspect of female.
B
, Gnathosoma and scutal aspect.
pt:
peritremes,
scs
: scutal setae,
bs
: body setae.
C
, Female genital area, ventral view.
D
, Male overview with genital area and aedeagus.
E
, Tarsal setation, tarsus I, lateral view.
F
, Setation of right leg I, II, female, ventral view.
Venter – Striation transverse and smooth, no setae present. Genital field mainly ventral in position (
Fig. 4
C). Four perigenital setae and 2 spinelike setae crossing the genital opening present.
Male
—
Holotypes
530–535 µm long, including mouthparts, and about 600–635 µm wide in the widest part.
Leg chaetotaxy (5333) (33[2]22) (3322[1]) (1111[0]).
Aedeagus — Elongate, straight in proximal part, distal part sinuous (
Fig.4
D). Two pairs of middorsal setae flanking genital opening.
Remarks — Special mention must be made in respect to the genal and femoral setation, which shows a higher number of setae then any of the know setation patterns of
Pterygosoma
(
Jack, 1964
)
. Thus, this species forms it’s own group.
The mites were firmly attached under the abdominal and ventral scales of extremities, rarely on the ventral scales of the tail.
Material examined — Examination of individuals ex.
Liolaemus buergeri
Werner
,
L. bibroni
Bell
,
L. petrophilus
DonosoBarros and Cei
,
L. austromendocinus
Cei
,
L. elongatus
Koslowsky
, and
L. gracilis
Bell
, from the provinces of Neuquén, Chubut, Mendoza and Rio Negro,
Argentina
.
Type
series (
5 male
and female specimens, cleared in lactic acid and mounted in Berlese medium) deposited in the collection of the Insect Genomics Lab, at Brigham Young University (please refer to
Katharina Dittmar De La Cruz
).
FIGURE 5
. Distribution of
Pterygosoma patagonica
n. sp.
(black) within the range of
Liolaemus
spp. (grey).
Etymology — Since this particular parasite seems to be distributed primarily in Patagonia, we chose the epithet “
patagonica
”.
Distribution — The main distribution of mites of the genus
Pterygosoma
is on Old World
Agamidae
and Geckonidae. The new finding of a
Pterygosoma
sp. on iguanid lizards in
Argentina
expands their distribution to the New World (fig.5). Within
Argentina
, its distribution was assessed as stretching from the Province of Catamarca (26°51'48?
S 66°44'
19?W) southward along the Andes to the southern borders of the Province Chubut (42°22'35?S, 67°35'42?W).