Notes on the genus Chelonuropoda Sellnick, 1954 with description of three new species (Acari: Uropodina: Oplitidae)
Author
Kontschán, Jenő
Author
Starý, Josef
text
Journal of Natural History
2012
2012-03-31
46
11 - 12
741
756
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2011.651650
journal article
10.1080/00222933.2011.651650
1464-5262
5199641
Chelonuropoda brasiliana
sp. nov.
(
Figure 5
)
Material examined
Holotype
.
Female.
Brazil
,
Pantanal
,
Chapada Dos Guimaraes
,
09 December 1990
, closed forest, from leaf litter and soil, leg.
J. Balogh.
Figure 4.
Chelonuropoda canalitica
sp. nov.
, (A, B) female, (C, D) male. (A) Ventral view of gnathosoma; (B) chelicera; (C) intercoxal region; (D) peritreme.
Paratypes
.
Three males. Locality and date same as
holotype
.
Holotype
is deposited in
HNHM
, one of the
paratypes
in
NHMG
, other
paratypes
in
HNHM
.
Description
Female.
Length of idiosoma 1050 µm, width 750 µm (
n
= 1). Shape of idiosoma suboval, posterior margin rounded.
Dorsal side (
Figure 5A
). Dorsal and marginal shields fused close to the anterior margin. Marginal shield anteriorly wide, bearing short, smooth and needle-like setae (
c
.20–30 µm). All dorsal setae smooth and needle-like (
c
.65–80 µm), J1
c
.120–125 µm. All setae on dorsal shield placed in small, rounded depressions (
Figure 5B
). Two strongly sclerotized C-shaped rings present on posterolateral areas of dorsal shield, a shallow channel situated between these two rings.
Figure 5.
Chelonuropoda brasiliana
sp. nov.
, (A–D) female, (E) male. (A) Dorsal idiosoma; (B) dorsal and marginal setae; (C) ventral idiosoma; (D) peritreme; (E) intercoxal region.
Ventral side (
Figure 5C
). Sternal and ventral shields without ornamentation, all sternal setae smooth and needle-like (
c
.23–35 µm). Ventral setae smooth, needle-like (45–60 µm) and placed in small, rounded depressions. Metapodal regions with one pair of deep, transversal, funnel-like furrows bordered with two rows of phylliform setae (
c
.72–78 µm), these two funnels are connected by a shallow, weakly sclerotized channel. Adanal setae
ad1 c
.55–60 µm,
ad2 c
.30–32 µm, postanal seta similar in shape and length to
ad1
. Stigmata situated between coxae II and III. Peritremes Ω- shaped. Genital shield wide, linguliform, without sculptural pattern and anterior process. Tritosternum with quadrangular basis, laciniae with three branches.
Legs. All segments with simple and smooth setae and a pair of claws at tip of the ambulacral prolongation.
Gnathosoma. Corniculi horn-like, laciniae with several smooth long branches. Hypostomal setae h1 and h3 smooth, h2 and h4 apically serrate, their length not measurable exactly, because insertions were covered by coxae I. Palp trochanter with one short smooth seta and one long, marginally serrate seta. Epistome triangular and apically pilose.
Male.
Length of idiosoma 940–960 µm, width 630–640 µm (
n
= 3). Shape oval, posterior margin rounded.
Dorsal side. Ornamentation and chaetotaxy as for female.
Ventral side. Ornamentation and chaetotaxy of ventral shield as for female. Sternal shield without sculptural pattern, the positions of sternal setae are shown in
Figure 5E
. All sternal setae smooth and needle-like (
c
.34–40 µm). Genital shield rounded and placed between coxae III.
Nymphs and larva are unknown.
Etymology
The name of the new species refers the country where the specimens were collected.
Key to the females of
Chelonuropoda
species
[Based on illustration of
Sellnick (1954)
,
Hirschmann and Zirngiebl-Nicol (1973a
, b),
Hirschmann (1991)
,
Kontschán (2006
,
2009a
).]
1. Genital shield ornamented on surface.................................... 2 Surface of genital shield smooth......................................... 7
2. Peritreme hairpin shaped, with one bend and almost straight parallel sections in medial part (
Figure 6A–D
)............................................3 Peritreme P-shaped, R-shaped or mushroom-shaped, medial part never with only one bend and simple straight section (
Figure 6E–H
)................. 5
3. A channel with strongly sclerotized margins present between the two metapodal furrows...........................................
C. canalitica
Channel
with strongly sclerotized margins absent......................... 4
Figure 6. Peritreme of all known
Chelonuropoda
species.
(A)
Chelonuropoda nicolae
; (B)
Chelonuropoda bispirata
; (C)
Chelonuropoda cheloniforma
; (D)
Chelonuropoda canalitica
female; (E)
Chelonuropoda canalitica
male; (F)
Chelonuropoda banari
; (G)
Chelonuropoda africana
; (H)
Chelonuropoda athiasae
; (I)
Chelonuropoda similibispirata
; (J)
Chelonuropoda brasiliana
. (A), after
Hirschmann and Zirngiebl-Nicol (1964)
; (B) after
Sellnick (1954)
; (H–I) after
Hirschmann and Zirngiebl-Nicol (1973a
,b); (C–G and J) original.
4. Margin of sternal shield covered by small, oval pits...............
C. nicolae
Sternal
shield smooth.........................................
C. bispirata
5. Peritreme mushroom-shaped (
Figure 6H
).......................
C. athiasae
Peritreme
P-shaped or R-shaped (
Figure 6F,G
)........................... 6
6. Peritreme P-shaped (
Figure 6G
), sternum with six pairs of setae, basis of tritosternum narrow, shallow channel present between the two C-shaped rings on dorsal shield...............................................
C. africana
Peritreme
R-shaped (
Figure 6F
), sternum with 11 pairs of setae, basis of tritosternum wide, ditch absent between the two C-shaped rings on dorsal shield...........................................................
C. banari
7. Peritreme Ω- shaped (
Figure 6J
)...............................
C. brasiliana
Peritreme
hairpin-shaped (
Figure 6C
)......................
C. cheloniforma
Notes to the key.
Chelonuropoda similibispirata
is not presented in the key because it is known only from male specimens. This species has mushroom-shaped peritremes (
Figure 6I
), similar to
C. athiasae
(
Figure 6H
), but peritreme of
C. similibispirata
has an accessory loop between the stigmata and mushroom-shaped medial section (
Figure 6I
).
Zoogeographical notes
Up to now, only nine
Chelonuropoda
species
are described from the two, large tropical regions of the world. Four species are recorded from the Neotropical region,
Brazil
and
Bolivia
; the other five species are described from the Ethiopian region, namely
Chad
,
Angola
,
Ivory Coast
,
Kenya
and
Madagascar
(
Figure 7
). This distribution
type
, which is called Amphiatlantic, is not an unknown phenomenon among the mesostigmatid mites. Some years ago,
Karg and Schorlemmer (2009)
presented similar occurrences in the genera
Africoseius
Krantz, 1962
and
Rykellus
Lee, 1970
and the study of the genus
Afrotrachytes
Kontschán 2006
showed similar results (
Kontschán 2009b
).
Figure 7. Occurrences of the known
Chelonuropoda
species.
Regarding the Afrotropical and Neotropical occurrences of the genus
Chelonuropoda
, this genus must have developed during a geological period when the African and the South America land masses were connected, before the breaking up of Gondwanaland. This connection continued until the Upper Cretaceous; hence we suppose this genus originated during this geological period.