The oribatid mite superfamily Eutegaeoidea (Acari, Oribatida), with descriptions of new taxa from Australia and New Caledonia and a re-assessment of genera and families
Author
Colloff, Matthew J.
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-11-06
5365
1
1
93
https://www.mapress.com/zt/article/download/zootaxa.5365.1.1/52220
journal article
279445
10.11646/zootaxa.5365.1.1
23a3b51c-63b7-4937-bdba-384f28db6be5
1175-5334
10146969
1DC72714-D0E8-49D8-821D-03C6B2A7AE80
Pterozetidae Luxton, 1988
Pterozetidae
Luxton, 1988a
, p. 83
.
Type
genus:
Pterozetes
Hammer, 1966
, p. 78
.
Diagnosis.
The following diagnosis is based on that of
Luxton (1988a)
, modified to accommodate the transfer of
Porrhotegaeus
to
Porrhotegaeidae
fam. nov.
(cf. below).
Lamellae long, well developed, fused with each other apically, their anterior margin concave and curved or Vshaped, with lateral points, but anterior margin not folded ventrally and fused with rostrum. Bothridia fused with bases of lamellae and prodorsum. With long, blade-like humeral processes extending from lateral margin at widest part of notogaster to point at least level with mid-length of lamellae, reflexed ventrally (
Dudichella
), but lacking marginal lobes posterior of main anterior lobe. Interlamellar setae present (
Pterozetes novazealandicus
Hammer, 1966
) or absent. Notogaster U-shaped, with eight or nine pairs of short, thin, smooth setae; those of
l
and
h
series positioned marginally. Pedotectum I large, broad, sub-rectangular in ventral outline; pd II rectangular or pointed; discidium sub-rectangular or ovoid. Anterior margin of pedotectum I and epimere I forming straight or curved transverse tectum covering posterior mentum. Perigenital carinae present (
Dudichella
) or absent (
Pterozetes
). Enantiophysis E4 present as posterior tubercle only (
Pterozetes lawrencei
sp. nov.
) or absent (
Dudichella
and
Pterozetes novazealandicus
). Six pairs of genital setae: aligned longitudinally in
Pterozetes
or with
g
2
and
g
5
displaced laterally in
Dudichella
. Three pairs of adanal setae. Anal plates lozenge-shaped.
Remarks.
Norton and Behan-Pelletier (2009)
considered
Pterozetidae
a junior synonym of
Eutegaeidae
due to the apparent lack of diagnostic characters at the family-level. However, the humeral processes of
Pterozetidae
originate on the lateral margin of the notogaster at its widest part, well posterior of the dorsosejugal scissure, and are curved and convex along their external margins, forming triangular, blade-like structures extending almost to the rostrum, covering most or all of legs I and II, and quite different from those of the
Eutegaeidae
. In her definition of
Pterozetes
,
Hammer (1966
, p. 78)
pointed out that the humeral process ‘is different from that of
Eutegaeus
’, in that it is more like a pteromorph than the cuticular projection from the anterior margin of the notogaster found in the latter genus. In
Dudichella
, the ventrally curved median margins of the humeral processes overlap with the lateral margins of epimeres I and II, which are broadened and excavated, covering legs I and II (J. Balogh, 1970).
The main character state that differentiates
Pterozetidae
from other families of
Eutegaeoidea
is that the anterior parts of the lamellae are fused with each other and their anterior margin is concave and curved or V-shaped, but is not folded ventrally and fused with the rostrum and with lateral foramina as in
Compactozetes
.
Luxton (1988a
, pp. 84, 85) considered the lamellar cusps of
Dudichella
are free and not fused, but J.
Balogh (1970b
, p. 36) described them as ‘medially confluent and thus X-shaped’ and his
Fig. 1
clearly shows the cusps as fused in the midline, with a deep V-shaped indentation between the lateral apices. This arrangement is completely different from the free lamellar cusps of the
Eutegaeidae
,
Neoeutegaeidae
and
Porrhotegaeidae
fam. nov
.
I consider the morphology of the anterior margin of the lamellae a synapomorphy of
Pterozetidae
.
Pterozetidae
is morphologically most similar to
Compactozetidae
in that the margins of the bothridia are fused with the prodorsum and bases of lamellae and the humeral processes originate on the margin of the notogaster at its widest part. However, they differ from those of the
Compactozetidae
in lacking the 2-4 lobes posterior of the apical humeral projection. As mentioned above, the lamellae of
Pterozetidae
are quite different in morphology from those of
Compactozetes
. Also, the anal plates of
Pterozetidae
are lozenge-shaped while those of
Compactozetidae
are rectangular.
Additional diagnostic characters for
Pterozetidae
are that epimeres I and II are very broad and long, whereas epimeres III and IV are much narrower and shorter. Pedotectum I is very large with sub-rectangular lateral margins, with an anterolateral point in
Dudichella
, and extend to the medial margin of the humeral process (
Pterozetes
) or overlap it (
Dudichella
). The anterior margin of pedotectum I and epimere I forms a straight or curved transverse tectum covering the posterior part of the mentum and the ventro-lateral margins of the gnathosoma, as in most
Compactozetidae
, but this structure is not present in the
Eutegaeidae
or
Neoeutegaeidae
. I consider there are sufficient character states of diagnostic value to retain
Pterozetidae
as a valid family. The interlamellar setae are absent in
Pterozetes lawrencei
sp. nov.
and
Dudichella
but present in
Pterozetes novazealandicus
Hammer, 1966
(cf.
Luxton, 1988c
,
Fig. 1A
therein).
In
Dudichella
the lamellar setae emerge from the ventral surface of the lamellae, as in
Porrhotegaeus
(cf. below).
Dudichella
also differs from
Pterozetes
in having what J.
Balogh (1970b)
described as ‘minute, peloptoide’ [
sic
] chelicerae. It is unclear whether the chelicerae are truly pelopsiform (i.e. expanded basally) or are simply thin, attenuate and chelate-dentate as in
Atalotegaeus mensarosi
(cf. above).