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
Mesoplophora
Berlese, 1904
Mesoplophora
Berlese, 1904b, p. 23.
Phtiracarulus
Berlese, 1920a, p. 149.
Meshoplophora
, Lombardini, 1936, p. 44.
Berlese characterized the genus
Mesoplophora
as similar to "
Hoploderma
", but with genital and anal openings remote from each other. Under four names he described two species of the genus; the type is
Mesoplophora michaeliana
.
In 1920 Berlese described
Phtiracarulus
, a supposed subgenus of
Phthiracarus
, but a study of the type-species and single representative (
P. perexiguus
) demonstrates that this is a juvenile
M. michaeliana
; further commentary is given below 2).
2) Willmann (1930, p. 245, figs. 8, 9) described a ptychoid mite from Guatemala, which he classified in
Phtiracarulus
(
P. rostralis
); he considered the differences with
Phthiracarus
sufficient to raise the subgenus to generic rank. Jacot (1938a, p. 112, pl. 9 figs. 1-5) described a closely related species (
P. laevis
) from the U.S.A. It is difficult to separate
laevis
and
rostralis
, because the differential characters mentioned by Jacot (number and length of the notogastral hairs) are not evident; it is, indeed, not impossible that in the mountains of Guatamala (the type-material of
rostralis
was collected at an altitude of 2500 feet) the same species occurs as in N. America.
Apparently, Willman still considered
P. rostralis
a representative of the family
Phthiracaridae
. Jacot regarded the two species (
laevis
and
rostralis
) as highly developed
Protoplophoridae
(tribe
Phtiracarulini
Jacot, 1938a). Up to the present, nobody observed, however, the relationship with the
Mesoplophoridae
; in fact,
rostralis
and
laevis
remind of the scleritized nymphs of
Mesoplophora
, although they are certainly adults. Apart from females with eggs, Jacot also described remarkable, scleritized nymphs. A reinvestigation of the large material collected by Jacot will certainly enlarge our knowledge of the systematic position of the
Mesoplophoridae
. I remark that in
Phtiracarulus
(sensu Willmann and Jacot) genital and anal plates are separated by a plate that possibly must be considered a fusion of adanals and prae-anal.
Because
Phtiracarulus Berlese
is a synonym of
Mesoplophora
, a new genus must be created for
Phtiracarulus
sensu Willmann and Jacot. I name this genus
Archoplophora
nov. gen.
, but for the moment I refer to the diagnosis given by Jacot (1938a, p. 112, pl. 9 figs. 1-5). I designate
Phtiracarulus laevis Jacot
(1938a) as type of the genus
Archoplophora
.