A New Cheyletid Mite Metacheyletia Ngaii N. Sp. (Acariformes: Cheyletidae) From Quills Of Corythaixoides Leucogaster (Musophagidae) From Tanzania
Author
Bochkov, A. V.
Author
Skoracki, M.
text
Acarologia
2011
2011-03-30
51
1
93
97
http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/acarologia/20111996
journal article
10.1051/acarologia/20111996
2107-7207
5402921
Metacheyletia ngaii
n. sp.
(
Figures 1
and
2
)
Description — Female (
holotype
) —
Gnathosoma
90 long (
90 in
1 paratype
) and 115 wide (120). Peritremes arch-like, each peritremal branch with 7–8 segments. Palpal femur 40 long (40) and 37 wide (35). Palpal claw with 1 basal tooth. Palpal setation: palpal femur –
dF
; palpal genu –
dG
; palpal tibia –
dTi, l’Ti, l"Ti
; palpal tarsus – smooth eupathidia
amc, sul, ul’, ul"
, and solenidion
ω1
. Subcapitular setae
n
absent, adoral setae
ao1, ao2
, and subcoxal setae
elcp
present.
Idiosoma
495 long (585) and 355 wide (415), ovoid. Propodonotal shield indistinct. No cupules observed. All idiosomal setae smooth filiform. Setae
vi
2 times shorter than
ve
; setae
si
and
d2
1.4– 1.5 times shorter than
se
and
e2
;
c1
and
d1
about 2 times longer than
d2
; setae
c1
longer than distance between setal bases
c1
and
d1
; setae
h1
and
h2
subequal. Three pairs of pseudogenital (
ps1–ps3
), 2 pairs of genital (
g1
and
g2
), and 3 pairs of aggenital (
ag1– ag3
) setae present. Lengths of setae:
vi
30 (35),
ve
65 (70),
si
50,
se
70 (70),
c1
130,
c2
120 (125),
d1
120 (115),
d2
50 (65),
e2
80 (75),
f2
65 (75),
h1
120 (115),
h2
115 (120),
ps1–ps3
23–25,
g1
and
g2
24–25,
ag1–ag3
23– 27,
1a
35 (35),
1b
45 (55),
3a
35 (35). Setae
4a
absent.
Legs
IV completely absent. Leg I–IV setation: I – tarsus with 7 setae (
ft, tc’, tc", p’, p", u’, u"
) + solenidion
ω1
, tibia with 4 setae (
d, l’, l", v
) + solenidion
’
, genu with 1 seta (
l’
) + solenidion
σ
, femur with 2 setae (
dF
and
vF
), trochanter without setae, coxal field with 1 seta (
1b
); II – tarsus with 5 setae (
tc’, tc", p’, u’, u"
) + solenidion
ω1
, tibia with 4 setae (
d, l’, l", v
), genu with 1 seta (
l’
), femur with 2 setae (
dF
and
vF
), trochanter and coxal field without setae; III – tarsus with 5 setae (
tc’, tc", p’, u’, u"
), tibia with 4 setae (
d, l’, l", v
), genu with 1 seta (
l’
), femur with 1 seta (
dF
), trochanter and coxal field without setae.
FIGURE 2:
Metacheyletia ngaii
sp. nov.
, details of holotype female. A – Peritremal branch. B – Palpal tibiotarsus in dorsal view. C – Same in ventral view. D – Tarsus I in dorsal view. E – Same in ventral view. F – Tarsus II in dorsal view. G – Same in ventral view. H – Tarsus III in dorsal view. I – Same in ventral view. J – Leg III in ventral view. Scale bars: A-I = 20 µm; J = 50 µm.
Male — Unknown.
Type Material —
Holotype
female and female
paratype
from
Corythaixoides leucogaster
(Rüppell, 1842)
(Cuculiformes:
Musophagidae
),
Tanzania
: Tanganyika,
23 March 1960
, coll. unknown.
Type
deposition —
All
material is deposited in the
Zoological Institute
of the
Russian Academy of Sciences
,
St. Petersburg
,
Russia
.
Etymology — This new species is dedicated to the Maasai God – Ngai, the creator of everything.
Differential diagnosis. This new species is morphologically closest to
M. degenerata
. In females of both species, three pairs of aggenital setae are present and the propodonotal shield is indistinct. It differs from
M. degenerata
by the following features. In females of
M. ngaii
n. sp.
, setae
vi
are two times shorter than
ve
, setae
d2
are two times shorter than
d1
, setae
h1
and
h2
are subequal, setae
c1, d1
, and
e2
are 130, 115–120, and 75–80 long, respectively. In females of
M. degenerata
, setae
vi
are 1.1–1.2 times shorter than
ve,
setae
d1
and
d2
are subequal, setae
h1
are about 1.3 times shorter than
h2,
setae
c1, d1
, and
e2
are 65, 60, and 50 long, respectively.
Remarks — The genus
Metacheyletia
is, probably, initially associated with parrots, because its representatives inhabit these hosts in Africa and South America. Unfortunately these mites are unknown from
Australia
, and records of
Metacheyletia
spp.
from the Australian parrots would be very desirable as an additional prove of this hypothesis. The two species of this genus from non-parrot hosts,
M. degenerata
and
M. ngaii
,
are still known exclusively from central Africa and morphologically very close to each other. Parrots are widely distributed in central Africa and, therefore, we suggest that in this region, mites of the genus
Metacheyletia
shifted on a non-parrot host from a parrot with the following dispersion and speciation on birds of different nonparrot orders.