On the taxonomy of water mites (Acari: Hydrachnidia) described from the Palaearctic, part 1: Hydrachnidae, Limnocharidae and Eylaidae
Author
Davids, Kees
Author
Sabatino, Antonio Di
Author
Gerecke, Reinhard
Author
Gledhill, Terence
Author
Smit, Harry
text
Zootaxa
2005
1061
36
64
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.170186
d91ae7dd-a600-4f24-a890-7201060d61b6
11755326
170186
Hydrachna processifera
Koenike, 1903
Syn.:
Hydrachna perpera
Koenike, 1908
,
nov. syn.
Material examined:
Hydrachna perpera
,
holotype
female,
SMNH
952, Leipzig (
Germany
);
Italy
, Sicilia
I 8
, I 538, 1/0/2; Sardegna I 351, Lago Baratz, 0/0/1 (
Gerecke 1991
); I 390, Flumendosa at Villasalto, 1/3/0 (new record);
Hydrachna vaillanti
K. Viets
holotype
male
SMF
7160,
Algeria
, Sahara central, coll. Vaillant.
Discussion: The original description of
H. perpera
reports the presence of two paired small dots, but without detail about their location. In the
type
specimen (mounted in toto, with details of the frontal area hardly visible) these sclerites can be identified as the muscle attachment sclerites located medially from the postocularia. The gnathosoma is mounted in transverse position, but it is clear that the gnathosomal rostrum is not particularly elongated and that the palp segments are rather robust. From all points of view, this specimen agrees with
H. processifera
and should be treated as a junior synonym of that species. This point of view is corroborated by the fact that it was recorded occurring together with
H. inermis
, possibly a further synonym of
H. processifera
(see there).
Hydrachna vaillanti
K. Viets, 1951
is very similar to
H. processifera
from most points of view (shape of frontal sclerites, coxae and palp the chelicerae are missing). A possible diagnostic difference is found in the male genital field (minor in dimensions, anterior indentation more elongated, extending over 1/3 of the genital field L). This difference might be an individual aberration. The taxonomic state of
H. vaillanti
should be clarified with a study of population variability.