Berlese's Primitive Oribatid Mites
Author
van der Hammen, L.
text
Zoologische Verhandelingen
1959
40
1
93
http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/document/148866
journal article
ORI111
0DC6B575-3CB3-41C1-A3EC-850520AE4487
HYPOCHTHONIIDAE Berlese
, 1910
In his early publications Berlese (1896a, 1896b) regarded the genus
Hypochthonius
as part of the family
Nothridae
in which it had a separate Position because of the divided notogaster. The genus consisted of species that are now regarded as representatives of separate families, although (with one exception) these still belong to a single group (
Enarthronota
). Due to the erroneous Observation of a subdivision of the notogaster, Berlese (1896) described also a strongly different species as a
Hypochthonius
(
H. tectorum
); this species (afterwards the type of the genus
Trhypochthonius
) shows, however, little relationship with the
Enarthronota
.
In 1910 (p. 218) Berlese created a family
Hypoctonidae
(sic!) 3); he divided the genus
Hypochthonius
, and added other genera so that the family in his opinion consisted of
Parhypochthonius
,
Trhypochthonius
,
Trizetes
,
Sphaerochthonius
,
Cosmochthonius
,
Hypochthonius
(with subgenus
Hypochthoniella
), and
Brachychthonius
. Some years after, he gave the same classification (Berlese, 1913a, p. 7). According to moderns views the first-mentioned 2 genera are now classified in groups that are widely remote of the
Hypochthoniidae
, whilst
Trizetes
even does not belong to the primitive Oribatid mites. The other ones are all reckoned among the
Enarthronota
.
3) In the same paper the name is, however, also spelt as
Hypochthonidae
.
Nowadays
the genera
Hypochthonius
,
Eohypochthonius
, and
Malacoangelia
only are considered representatives of the family
Hypochthoniidae
1).
1) Recently Schweizer (1956, pp. 234-244, figs. 151-159) described a
new genus
Alphypochthonius
with 9 new species, which he classified with the
Hypochthoniidae
. All species are, however, nymphs and larvae of higher
Oribatei
, probably
Melanozetes
,
Fuscozetes
,
Trichoribates
,
Sphaerozetes
, etc. The type of the genus
Alphypochthonius
is
A. alpinus
; description and figures of this species strongly resemble
Melanozetes
nymphs, probably
M. mollicomus
(cf. Van der Hammen, 1952, p. 97, fig. 8d).
Alphypochthonius
must therefore be placed in the synonymy of
Melanozetes
. I remark that the differences in measurements, which Schweizer regards as differences between males and females, are of course due to the presence of different nymphal stages.