treatments-xml/data/FA/75/87/FA7587D7CC34FFAAFF55620DFB10FA7E.xml
2024-06-21 12:58:46 +02:00

624 lines
67 KiB
XML
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

<document id="7619F94849A21712B65E730CB1F7E7DC" ID-CLB-Dataset="45499" ID-DOI="10.5281/zenodo.208456" ID-GBIF-Dataset="7f4288f8-f0c3-423f-9f26-2415f0039141" ID-ISSN="1175-5326" ID-Zenodo-Dep="208456" IM.metadata_approvedBy="felipe" IM.tables_requiresApprovalFor="existingObjects,plazi" IM.taxonomicNames_approvedBy="felipe" checkinTime="1460436186208" checkinUser="plazi" docAuthor="Seniczak, Stanisław &amp; Seniczak, Anna" docDate="2012" docId="FA7587D7CC34FFAAFF55620DFB10FA7E" docLanguage="en" docName="zt03184p034.pdf" docOrigin="Zootaxa 3184" docStyle="DocumentStyle:890A69B780ED73D6DB8551B71C8AC79E.4:Zootaxa.2009-2012.journal_article" docStyleId="890A69B780ED73D6DB8551B71C8AC79E" docStyleName="Zootaxa.2009-2012.journal_article" docStyleVersion="4" docTitle="Oribatula tibialis Nicolet 1855" docType="treatment" docVersion="12" lastPageNumber="27" masterDocId="064CFFAFCC27FFB0FFC26064FF80FFAE" masterDocTitle="Differentiation of external morphology of Oribatulidae (Acari: Oribatida) in light of the ontogeny of three species" masterLastPageNumber="34" masterPageNumber="1" pageNumber="20" updateTime="1698332282176" updateUser="ExternalLinkService">
<mods:mods id="93BEAF2FFD61A81C6E8C744B7AE84BFD" xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
<mods:titleInfo id="A87C5BD9A4F7A8E8E6DAA8EAD19901F3">
<mods:title id="A538D3EC5CAC1B1D80540D0950A15714">Differentiation of external morphology of Oribatulidae (Acari: Oribatida) in light of the ontogeny of three species</mods:title>
</mods:titleInfo>
<mods:name id="E8BDBDC9871604D850EE61531584FBA1" type="personal">
<mods:role id="5C5A196D0F1685F2D981B1859A79DF6A">
<mods:roleTerm id="41B6486EAC40C571436262097408D007">Author</mods:roleTerm>
</mods:role>
<mods:namePart id="3FFA732C7666178F3B5C20F11FDB9D2F">Seniczak, Stanisław</mods:namePart>
</mods:name>
<mods:name id="27B6F88B402DA6ECBCF4AAB4B13CD5EA" type="personal">
<mods:role id="B5FB2DBE83CEDDE2C6452F5D6F1907A1">
<mods:roleTerm id="58AC14042878C706F9DB492F668BC651">Author</mods:roleTerm>
</mods:role>
<mods:namePart id="96FDD25109F29E45A959E1DF8C33AB5E">Seniczak, Anna</mods:namePart>
</mods:name>
<mods:typeOfResource id="4A95B155F776D643A0D617D945F2E6C9">text</mods:typeOfResource>
<mods:relatedItem id="46DC105AD1DCE7CC5032314B1DCCF4D5" type="host">
<mods:titleInfo id="654F49CE8C8B5B929CDAEEE2EDF58848">
<mods:title id="2F07C69C17E1A080BBB91C650D5EBFE2">Zootaxa</mods:title>
</mods:titleInfo>
<mods:part id="84B18F8DA6E66B58F04911ABE3484BB9">
<mods:date id="B7A8845F55878E77F309F29ACF9C3D87">2012</mods:date>
<mods:detail id="80010045EFBE72DA0EC3E11C852CDD28" type="volume">
<mods:number id="1CA01BFE7D4E9DD6B96C0041CA0500CC">3184</mods:number>
</mods:detail>
<mods:extent id="B3BAEDC340FCF9128A8B1C04117D1699" unit="page">
<mods:start id="BB571FA70D78E4B4F66905598AAF43C8">1</mods:start>
<mods:end id="CAA9F5372D5775E0227E36810D78BB78">34</mods:end>
</mods:extent>
</mods:part>
</mods:relatedItem>
<mods:classification id="B664616C9EC6A5DE7CE11FD1C747B5C0">journal article</mods:classification>
<mods:identifier id="43591E450EECA0A47D9F9161A8353DB6" type="CLB-Dataset">45499</mods:identifier>
<mods:identifier id="0C03CF94D41ED3841E4B12505845637C" type="DOI">10.5281/zenodo.208456</mods:identifier>
<mods:identifier id="6ED51AD72145D73F21359A93EBCD3D88" type="GBIF-Dataset">7f4288f8-f0c3-423f-9f26-2415f0039141</mods:identifier>
<mods:identifier id="7C63462CD034D2C936FB1083A54D8AB3" type="ISSN">1175-5326</mods:identifier>
<mods:identifier id="E5C360B26BCE7E6E6E831F94D243B4C8" type="Zenodo-Dep">208456</mods:identifier>
</mods:mods>
<treatment id="FA7587D7CC34FFAAFF55620DFB10FA7E" ID-DOI="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5616825" ID-GBIF-Taxon="119431933" ID-Zenodo-Dep="5616825" LSID="urn:lsid:plazi:treatment:FA7587D7CC34FFAAFF55620DFB10FA7E" httpUri="http://treatment.plazi.org/id/FA7587D7CC34FFAAFF55620DFB10FA7E" lastPageId="26" lastPageNumber="27" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">
<subSubSection id="3AC6654ACC34FFA3FF55620DFE19FD0A" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" type="nomenclature">
<paragraph id="726336C1CC34FFA3FF55620DFDA1FD2D" blockId="19.[151,545,617,676]" box="[151,545,617,643]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">
<heading id="292B81ADCC34FFA3FF55620DFDA1FD2D" bold="true" box="[151,545,617,643]" fontSize="11" level="1" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" reason="1">
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC34FFA3FF55620DFDA1FD2D" ID-CoL="7W6C4" authority="Nicolet, 1855" authorityName="Nicolet" authorityYear="1855" box="[151,545,617,643]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Oribatula" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="tibialis">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FF55620DFDA1FD2D" bold="true" box="[151,545,617,643]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FF55620DFEE5FD2D" bold="true" box="[151,357,617,643]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Oribatula tibialis</emphasis>
(
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC34FFA3FEB6620DFD98FD2D" author="Nicolet" box="[372,536,617,643]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" refString="Nicolet, H. (1855) Histoire naturelle des Acariens qui se trouvent aux environs de Paris. Archives du Museum d'Histoire naturelle, Paris, 7, 381 - 482." type="journal article" year="1855">Nicolet, 1855</bibRefCitation>
)
</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
</heading>
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="726336C1CC34FFA3FF5562E8FE19FD0A" blockId="19.[151,545,617,676]" box="[151,409,652,676]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">
(
<figureCitation id="EAE72A44CC34FFA3FF5D62E8FF6EFD0A" box="[159,238,652,676]" captionStart="FIGURE 4" captionStartId="6.[151,250,1899,1922]" captionTargetBox="[195,1422,195,1853]" captionTargetId="figure@6.[168,1428,187,1884]" captionTargetPageId="6" captionText="FIGURE 4. Tarsus and part of tibia of adults, females, scale bars 20 µm. (A) Phauloppia lucorum, antiaxial aspect; (B) Ph. lucorum, part of tarsus, dorsal aspect; (C) Lucoppia burrowsi, part of tarsus, dorsal aspect; (D) L. burrowsi, antiaxial aspect; (E) Oribatula tibialis, antiaxial aspect." httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/208460/files/figure.png" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Figs. 4</figureCitation>
E, 10D, 1520)
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="3AC6654ACC34FFA3FF5562ABFE6DFCEE" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" type="reference_group">
<paragraph id="726336C1CC34FFA3FF5562ABFE5AFC8C" blockId="19.[151,1436,718,833]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC34FFA3FF5562ABFD80FD4A" ID-CoL="7W6C4" authority="Willmann 1931" authorityName="Willmann" authorityYear="1931" box="[151,512,718,741]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Oribatula" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="tibialis">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FF5562ABFECAFD4B" box="[151,330,719,741]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Oribatula tibialis</emphasis>
:
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC34FFA3FE9E62AAFD80FD4A" author="Willmann" box="[348,512,718,740]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" refString="Willmann, C. (1931) Moosmilben oder Oribatiden (Cryptostigmata). In: Dahl, F. (Ed.), Die Tierwelt Deutschlands, 22 (5), Gustav Fischer Jena, p. 79 - 200." type="journal article" year="1931">Willmann 1931</bibRefCitation>
</taxonomicName>
;
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC34FFA3FDCF62AAFD24FD4A" author="Schuster" box="[525,676,718,740]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" refString="Schuster, R. (1960) Uber die Okologie und Verbreitung von Bodenmilben (Oribatei) am Alpen-Ostrand, insbesondere in der Steiermark. Mitteilungen des Naturwissenschaftlichen Vereines fur Steiermark, 90, 132 - 149." type="journal article" year="1960">Schuster 1960</bibRefCitation>
;
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC34FFA3FD7062AAFCD5FD4A" author="Wallwork" box="[690,853,718,740]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" refString="Wallwork, J. A. (1983) Oribatids in forest ecosystems. Annual Review of Entomology, 28, 109 - 130." type="journal article" year="1983">Wallwork 1983</bibRefCitation>
;
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC34FFA3FCA062AAFBC4FD4A" author="Wunderle" box="[866,1092,718,741]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" refString="Wunderle, I., Beck, L. &amp; Woas, S. (1990) Ein Beitrag zur Taxonomie und Okologie der Oribatulidae und Scheloribatidae (Acari, Oribatei) in Sudwestdeutschland. Andrias, 7, 15 - 60." type="journal article" year="1990">
Wunderle
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FC0D62B4FC7FFD4B" box="[975,1023,719,741]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">et al</emphasis>
. 1990
</bibRefCitation>
;
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC34FFA3FB9062AAFA88FD4A" author="Perez-Inigo" box="[1106,1288,718,740]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" refString="Perez-Inigo, C. (1993) Acari, Oribatei, Poronota. In: Ramos, A. et al. (Eds.), Fauna Iberica. Museo de Ciencias Naturales, Madrid, vol. 3, p. 1 - 320." type="journal article" year="1993">Pérez-Íñigo 1993</bibRefCitation>
;
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC34FFA3FAD762AAFA18FD4A" author="Subias" box="[1301,1432,718,740]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" refString="Subias, L. S. (2004) Listado sistematico, sinonimico y biogeografico de los Acaros Oribatidos (Acariformes, Oribatida) del mundo (1758 - 2002). Graellsia 60, 3 - 305. Online version accessed in February 2011, 558 pp; http: // www. ucm. es / info / zoo / Artropodos / Catalogo. pdf." type="book chapter" year="2004">Subías 2004</bibRefCitation>
, 2011;
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC34FFA3FEC46289FE2FFCAD" author="Weigmann" box="[262,431,749,771]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" refString="Weigmann, G. (2006) Hornmilben (Oribatida). In: Dahl, F. (Ed.), Die Tierwelt Deutschland und der angrenzenden Meeresteile, 76. Teil. Goecke &amp; Evers, Keltern, p. 1 - 520." type="book chapter" year="2006">Weigmann 2006</bibRefCitation>
;
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC34FFA3FE7B628AFC89FCAD" author="Norton" box="[441,777,749,771]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" refString="Norton, R. A. &amp; Behan-Pelletier, V. M. (2009) Oribatida. In: Krantz, G. W. &amp; Walter, D. E (Eds.), A Manual of Acarology. Texas Tech University Press, Lubbock, p. 430 - 564." type="book chapter" year="2009">Norton and Behan-Pelletier 2009</bibRefCitation>
.
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC34FFA3FF5F6369FE56FC8C" authority="Nicolet, 1855" authorityName="Nicolet" authorityYear="1855" box="[157,470,780,802]" class="Insecta" family="Crambidae" genus="Notaspis" kingdom="Animalia" order="Lepidoptera" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="tibialis">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FF5F6369FEC2FC8C" box="[157,322,780,802]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Notaspis tibialis</emphasis>
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC34FFA3FE8B6368FE56FC8C" author="Nicolet" box="[329,470,780,802]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" refString="Nicolet, H. (1855) Histoire naturelle des Acariens qui se trouvent aux environs de Paris. Archives du Museum d'Histoire naturelle, Paris, 7, 381 - 482." type="journal article" year="1855">Nicolet, 1855</bibRefCitation>
</taxonomicName>
.
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="726336C1CC34FFA3FF5F634FFE6DFCEE" blockId="19.[151,1436,718,833]" box="[157,493,810,833]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC34FFA3FF5F634FFE6AFCEE" ID-CoL="8T6P6" authority="Berlese, 1908" authorityName="Berlese" authorityYear="1908" box="[157,490,810,833]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Oribatula" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="venusta">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FF5F634FFED4FCEF" box="[157,340,811,833]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Oribatula venusta</emphasis>
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC34FFA3FE99634EFE6AFCEE" author="Berlese" box="[347,490,810,832]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" refString="Berlese, A. (1908) Elenco di generi e specie nuovi di Acari. Redia, 5, 1 - 15." type="journal article" year="1908">Berlese, 1908</bibRefCitation>
</taxonomicName>
.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="3AC6654ACC34FFA3FF55630EFB90FAFB" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" type="diagnosis">
<paragraph id="726336C1CC34FFA3FF55630EFC0EFB0F" blockId="19.[151,1436,874,2031]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FF55630EFE91FC2D" bold="true" box="[151,273,874,899]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Diagnosis.</emphasis>
Adult of medium size (410530 µm), drop-shaped (
<figureCitation id="EAE72A44CC34FFA3FC4F630EFC65FC2C" box="[909,997,874,898]" captionStart="FIGURE 15" captionStartId="20.[151,250,1931,1954]" captionTargetBox="[293,1292,205,1892]" captionTargetId="figure@20.[262,1324,193,1910]" captionTargetPageId="20" captionText="FIGURE 15. Oribatula tibialis, adult. (A) Dorsal aspect, legs partially drawn, scale bar 50 µm; (B) apical part of seta le." httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/208468/files/figure.png" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Fig. 15</figureCitation>
), brown. Males usually smaller than females. Prodorsal seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FE6663EAFE38FC08" box="[420,440,910,934]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">le</emphasis>
rather long, setae
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FD4863EBFD21FC08" box="[650,673,911,934]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">ro</emphasis>
and
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FD1863EBFD70FC08" box="[730,752,911,934]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">in</emphasis>
shorter; all barbed. Lamellae well developed, wider in anterior part than in posterior part, translamella absent. Sensillus rather short, clavate, with barbed head. Notogaster arched in lateral aspect (
<figureCitation id="EAE72A44CC34FFA3FE6763B1FE75FC43" box="[421,501,981,1005]" captionStart="FIGURE 16" captionStartId="21.[151,250,1959,1982]" captionTargetBox="[182,1370,219,1897]" captionTargetId="figure@21.[165,1389,193,1914]" captionTargetPageId="21" captionText="FIGURE 16. Oribatula tibialis, adult, female, legs partially drawn, scale bar 100 µm. (A) Lateral aspect; (B) anogenital region." httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/208469/files/figure.png" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Fig. 16</figureCitation>
A), with 13 pairs of short setae, and with rounded porose areas. Porose areas also on segments of legs, like tarsus I and II, tibia IIV, and femur IIV. Four pairs of genital setae, two pairs in anterior part, and two pairs in posterior part of genital plates (
<figureCitation id="EAE72A44CC34FFA3FD386478FCCEFB9A" box="[762,846,1052,1076]" captionStart="FIGURE 16" captionStartId="21.[151,250,1959,1982]" captionTargetBox="[182,1370,219,1897]" captionTargetId="figure@21.[165,1389,193,1914]" captionTargetPageId="21" captionText="FIGURE 16. Oribatula tibialis, adult, female, legs partially drawn, scale bar 100 µm. (A) Lateral aspect; (B) anogenital region." httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/208469/files/figure.png" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Fig. 16</figureCitation>
B). Setae of
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FC1E6478FC78FB9A" box="[988,1016,1052,1076]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">ad</emphasis>
-series small,
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FB546478FB32FB9A" box="[1174,1202,1052,1076]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">ad</emphasis>
3 lateral to
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FAED6478FAD3FB9A" box="[1327,1363,1052,1076]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">iad</emphasis>
, other pairs posterior to anal opening. Solenidia and setae on tibia I and tarsus I similar (
<figureCitation id="EAE72A44CC34FFA3FBF86426FBFEFBF4" box="[1082,1150,1090,1114]" captionStart="FIGURE 4" captionStartId="6.[151,250,1899,1922]" captionTargetBox="[195,1422,195,1853]" captionTargetId="figure@6.[168,1428,187,1884]" captionTargetPageId="6" captionText="FIGURE 4. Tarsus and part of tibia of adults, females, scale bars 20 µm. (A) Phauloppia lucorum, antiaxial aspect; (B) Ph. lucorum, part of tarsus, dorsal aspect; (C) Lucoppia burrowsi, part of tarsus, dorsal aspect; (D) L. burrowsi, antiaxial aspect; (E) Oribatula tibialis, antiaxial aspect." httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/208460/files/figure.png" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Fig. 4</figureCitation>
E) as in
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC34FFA3FB1F6426FAE9FBF4" box="[1245,1385,1090,1114]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Phauloppia" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="lucorum">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FB1F6426FB7CFBF4" box="[1245,1276,1090,1114]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Ph</emphasis>
.
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FACE6426FAE9FBF4" box="[1292,1385,1090,1114]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">lucorum</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
, but porose areas on legs smaller. Formulae of leg setae (and solenidia):
<date id="06621001CC34FFA3FC726403FC7DFBD0" box="[944,1021,1126,1150]" bridgedPair="-" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">I 1-5</date>
-3(1)-4(2)-20(2);
<date id="06621001CC34FFA3FB0A6403FAA0FBD0" box="[1224,1312,1126,1150]" bridgedPair="-" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">II 1-5</date>
-2(1)-4(2)- 16(2);
<date id="06621001CC34FFA3FF2064EEFEC4FB0F" box="[226,324,1161,1185]" bridgedPair="-" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">III 2-3</date>
-1(1)-3(1)-15;
<date id="06621001CC34FFA3FE2664EEFDC0FB0F" box="[484,576,1161,1185]" bridgedPair="-" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">III 1-2</date>
-2-3(1)-12. Tarsi tridactylous.
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="726336C1CC34FFA3FF0B64C8FB90FAFB" blockId="19.[151,1436,874,2031]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">
Juveniles oval in dorsal aspect, light-yellow, in some individuals with darker region
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FB5C64C9FB42FB6B" box="[1182,1218,1197,1221]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">gla</emphasis>
. Larva with rather short setae, except longer prodorsal seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FD9E64B5FDF3FB46" box="[604,627,1233,1256]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">ro</emphasis>
, nymphs with long and barbed prodorsal setae, except short seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FA8F64B5FAE6FB46" box="[1357,1382,1233,1256]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">ex</emphasis>
, and rather short gastronotal setae, except longer setae
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FD006491FD4EFAA2" box="[706,718,1269,1292]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">c</emphasis>
3 and
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FCCE6491FC98FAA2" box="[780,792,1269,1292]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">c</emphasis>
1. Sensillus short, clavate, with barbed head. Gastronotum arched in lateral aspect, with 11 pairs of setae in larva, and with 15 pairs in nymphs. Some gastronotal setae with excentrosclerites (
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FEA1655BFEEFFAF8" box="[355,367,1343,1366]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">c</emphasis>
2,
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FE4B6559FE1FFAFB" box="[393,415,1341,1365]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">la</emphasis>
,
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FE6F6559FE43FAFB" box="[429,451,1341,1365]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">lp</emphasis>
and
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FE3B6559FD87FAFB" box="[505,519,1341,1365]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">h</emphasis>
<quantity id="B5249B24CC34FFA3FDC56528FDACFAFB" box="[519,556,1341,1370]" metricMagnitude="-2" metricUnit="m" metricValue="2.54" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" unit="in" value="1.0">1 in</quantity>
larva,
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FDBB655BFD05FAF8" box="[633,645,1343,1366]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">c</emphasis>
2,
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FD5A6559FD2EFAFB" box="[664,686,1341,1365]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">la</emphasis>
,
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FD796559FD51FAFB" box="[699,721,1341,1365]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">lp</emphasis>
,
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FD1D6559FD6DFAFB" box="[735,749,1341,1365]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">h</emphasis>
-series and
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FCAE655BFCFAFAF8" box="[876,890,1343,1366]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">p</emphasis>
<quantity id="B5249B24CC34FFA3FCB96528FC1FFAFB" box="[891,927,1341,1370]" metricMagnitude="-2" metricUnit="m" metricValue="2.54" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" unit="in" value="1.0">1 in</quantity>
nymphs).
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="3AC6654ACC34FFAAFF0B6507FD1EFDC5" lastPageId="26" lastPageNumber="27" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" type="description">
<paragraph id="726336C1CC34FFA3FF0B6507FAD0FA6C" blockId="19.[151,1436,874,2031]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FF0B6507FDA6FAD2" bold="true" box="[201,550,1379,1404]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Description of juvenile stages</emphasis>
. Larva oval (
<figureCitation id="EAE72A44CC34FFA3FD7E6507FC8EFAD5" box="[700,782,1379,1403]" captionStart="FIGURE 17" captionStartId="22.[151,250,2002,2025]" captionText="FIGURE 17. Oribatula tibialis, larva, legs partially drawn, scale bar 100 µm." pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Fig. 17</figureCitation>
), light-yellow, in some individuals with darker region
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FAB36500FA15FAD2" box="[1393,1429,1380,1404]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">gla</emphasis>
. Prodorsum subtriangular, seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FE3065ECFD89FA31" box="[498,521,1416,1439]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">ro</emphasis>
rather long, setae
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FD1D65E3FD74FA31" box="[735,756,1415,1439]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">le</emphasis>
and
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FCEC65ECFCC4FA31" box="[814,836,1416,1439]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">in</emphasis>
shorter, and inserted wider; all setae slightly curved and barbed; seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FE9665C8FEECFA6D" box="[340,364,1452,1475]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">ex</emphasis>
short and smooth. Bothridium rounded, sensillus rather short, clavate, with barbed head.
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="726336C1CC34FFA3FF0B65AAFA9CF9D1" blockId="19.[151,1436,874,2031]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">
Gastronotum with 11 pairs of setae, including seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FCD165AAFCA1FA48" box="[787,801,1486,1510]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">h</emphasis>
2, inserted lateral to posterior part of anal opening (
<figureCitation id="EAE72A44CC34FFA3FAAC65AAFF33F9A2" captionStart="FIGURE 18" captionStartId="23.[151,250,1973,1996]" captionTargetBox="[348,1220,225,1915]" captionTargetId="figure@23.[319,1245,193,1935]" captionTargetPageId="23" captionText="FIGURE 18. Oribatula tibialis, legs partially drawn, scale bar 100 µm. (A) Anal region of larva; (B) anogenital region of protonymph." httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/208470/files/figure.png" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Fig. 18</figureCitation>
A);
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FF206590FF70F9A2" box="[226,240,1524,1548]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">h</emphasis>
3 absent. All gastronotal setae rather short (
<tableCitation id="3F5E037ACC34FFA3FD276590FCBCF9A2" box="[741,828,1524,1548]" captionStart="TABLE 1" captionStartId="12.[151,235,376,397]" captionText="TABLE 1. Measurements of some morphological characters of juvenile stages of Phauloppia lucorum, Lucoppia burrowsi, and Oribatula tibialis (mean measurements of 10 specimens in μm): larva (L), protonymph (PN), deutonymph (DN), tritonymph (TN) and adult (AD). Nd—not developed." pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Table 1</tableCitation>
), except for slightly longer setae
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FB046591FB52F9A2" box="[1222,1234,1525,1548]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">c</emphasis>
3 and
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FAD46590FAA4F9A2" box="[1302,1316,1524,1548]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">h</emphasis>
1; all setae barbed. Setae
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FEFA6678FEC4F99D" box="[312,324,1564,1587]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">c</emphasis>
2,
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FE9A667FFEEEF99D" box="[344,366,1563,1587]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">la</emphasis>
,
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FEBC667FFE14F99D" box="[382,404,1563,1587]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">lp</emphasis>
and
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FE0C667FFE5CF99D" box="[462,476,1563,1587]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">h</emphasis>
1 with excentrosclerites, other setae without excentrosclerites. Cupule
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FB396678FA91F99D" box="[1275,1297,1564,1587]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">ia</emphasis>
posterior to seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FF0B6626FF55F9F7" box="[201,213,1602,1625]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">c</emphasis>
3, cupule
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FEFE6626FED8F9F7" box="[316,344,1602,1625]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">im</emphasis>
posterior to seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FDDA6625FDB4F9F7" box="[536,564,1601,1625]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">lm</emphasis>
, cupule
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FD516626FD29F9F7" box="[659,681,1602,1625]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">ip</emphasis>
anterior to seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FC9E6625FCEAF9F7" box="[860,874,1601,1625]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">h</emphasis>
1, cupule
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FC136625FC67F9F7" box="[977,999,1601,1625]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">ih</emphasis>
lateral to anterior part of anal opening. Paraproctal valves (segment PS) with two pairs of small setae. Anal region with few longitudinal folds.
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="726336C1CC34FFA3FF0B66EEFC74F898" blockId="19.[151,1436,874,2031]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">
Nymphs light-yellow and with relatively shorter prodorsum than in larva; some individuals with darker region
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FF5566CAFF3BF968" box="[151,187,1710,1734]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">gla</emphasis>
. Protonymph with 14 pairs of setae, as seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FD6566CAFD35F968" box="[679,693,1710,1734]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">h</emphasis>
3 and two pairs of
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FCBD66CBFC0DF968" box="[895,909,1711,1734]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">p</emphasis>
-series appear first time in this stage (
<figureCitation id="EAE72A44CC34FFA3FAF266CAFA00F968" box="[1328,1408,1710,1734]" captionStart="FIGURE 18" captionStartId="23.[151,250,1973,1996]" captionTargetBox="[348,1220,225,1915]" captionTargetId="figure@23.[319,1245,193,1935]" captionTargetPageId="23" captionText="FIGURE 18. Oribatula tibialis, legs partially drawn, scale bar 100 µm. (A) Anal region of larva; (B) anogenital region of protonymph." httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/208470/files/figure.png" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Fig. 18</figureCitation>
B) and remain in deuto- and tritonymph (
<figureCitation id="EAE72A44CC34FFA3FD8666B0FD20F942" box="[580,672,1748,1772]" captionStart="FIGURE 19" captionStartId="24.[151,250,1989,2012]" captionTargetBox="[360,1231,211,1948]" captionTargetId="figure@24.[322,1257,193,1956]" captionTargetPageId="24" captionText="FIGURE 19. Oribatula tibialis, anogenital region, legs partially drawn, scale bar 100 µm. (A) Deutonymph; (B) tritonymph." httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/208471/files/figure.png" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Figs. 19</figureCitation>
A, B). In deutonymph small setae of
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FB8366B0FBDDF942" box="[1089,1117,1748,1772]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">ad</emphasis>
-series (
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FB7566B0FB53F942" box="[1207,1235,1748,1772]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">ad</emphasis>
1
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FB2B66B1FB77F942" box="[1257,1271,1749,1772]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">a</emphasis>
d3) and pair
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FA4266B1FA1CF942" box="[1408,1436,1749,1772]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">ag</emphasis>
appear and remain in tritonymph. Ontogeny of genital setae similar as in
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC34FFA3FC09669FFBD5F8BD" box="[971,1109,1787,1811]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Phauloppia" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="19" pageNumber="20" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="lucorum">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FC09669FFC6AF8BD" box="[971,1002,1787,1811]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Ph</emphasis>
.
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FC3A669FFBD5F8BD" box="[1016,1109,1787,1811]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">lucorum</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
. Paraproctal valves of proto- and deutonymph glabrous, those of tritonymph with two pairs of small setae.
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="726336C1CC34FFA3FF0B6725FDDCF80E" blockId="19.[151,1436,874,2031]" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">
Prodorsal setae of tritonymph (
<figureCitation id="EAE72A44CC34FFA3FDE66725FDF5F8F7" box="[548,629,1857,1881]" captionStart="FIGURE 20" captionStartId="25.[151,250,1991,2014]" captionTargetBox="[309,1301,195,1934]" captionTargetId="figure@25.[282,1309,169,1957]" captionTargetPageId="25" captionText="FIGURE 20. Oribatula tibialis, tritonymph, legs partially drawn, scale bar 100 µm." httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/208472/files/figure.png" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Fig. 20</figureCitation>
) relatively longer than in larva, especially setae
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FB506725FB26F8F7" box="[1170,1190,1857,1881]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">le</emphasis>
and
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FB1E6726FB72F8F7" box="[1244,1266,1858,1881]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">in</emphasis>
;
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FAC36726FA97F8F7" box="[1281,1303,1858,1881]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">in</emphasis>
longer than
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FF556702FF2EF8D3" box="[151,174,1894,1917]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">ro</emphasis>
and
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FF2B6701FF7DF8D3" box="[233,253,1893,1917]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">le</emphasis>
; all setae slightly curved and barbed, seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FD286702FC83F8D3" box="[746,771,1894,1917]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">ex</emphasis>
small and smooth. Bothridium rounded, sensillus clavate, with barbed head, slimmer than in larva.
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="726336C1CC34FFAAFF0B67C8FAE0FE8F" blockId="19.[151,1436,874,2031]" lastBlockId="26.[151,1436,151,1488]" lastPageId="26" lastPageNumber="27" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">
Gastronotal setae rather short (
<tableCitation id="3F5E037ACC34FFA3FDE367C8FDF4F86A" box="[545,628,1964,1988]" captionStart="TABLE 1" captionStartId="12.[151,235,376,397]" captionText="TABLE 1. Measurements of some morphological characters of juvenile stages of Phauloppia lucorum, Lucoppia burrowsi, and Oribatula tibialis (mean measurements of 10 specimens in μm): larva (L), protonymph (PN), deutonymph (DN), tritonymph (TN) and adult (AD). Nd—not developed." pageId="19" pageNumber="20">Table 1</tableCitation>
) and slightly curved, except longer setae
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FB8967C9FBD7F86A" box="[1099,1111,1965,1988]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">c</emphasis>
1 and
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FB5467C9FB22F86A" box="[1174,1186,1965,1988]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">c</emphasis>
3; setae of
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FAD567C9FAA3F86A" box="[1303,1315,1965,1988]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">c</emphasis>
-series and
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FF5567B6FF33F844" box="[151,179,2002,2026]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">da</emphasis>
barbed, other setae rather smooth. Length of setae of
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FCD167B6FCA1F844" box="[787,801,2002,2026]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">d</emphasis>
-series decreasing from anterior to posterior. Setae
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FA9D67B7FAEBF844" box="[1375,1387,2003,2026]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">c</emphasis>
2,
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC34FFA3FABD67B6FA15F844" box="[1407,1429,2002,2026]" italics="true" pageId="19" pageNumber="20">la</emphasis>
,
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFF5560FCFF2DFF1E" box="[151,173,152,176]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">lp</emphasis>
,
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFF7D60FCFF4DFF1E" box="[191,205,152,176]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">h</emphasis>
-series and
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFE9660FDFEE2FF1E" box="[340,354,153,176]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">p</emphasis>
1 with excentrosclerites, other setae without excentrosclerites. Cupules
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFB5C60FDFB34FF1E" box="[1182,1204,153,176]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">ia</emphasis>
and
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFB3060FDFA8EFF1E" box="[1266,1294,153,176]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">im</emphasis>
as in larva, cupule
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFF2A60A4FF7EFF79" box="[232,254,192,215]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">ip</emphasis>
ventral to seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFE6460DBFE34FF79" box="[422,436,191,215]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">h</emphasis>
2, cupule
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFDD960DBFDBFFF79" box="[539,575,191,215]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">iad</emphasis>
lateral to anterior part of anal opening, cupule
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFB8B60A4FBEAFF79" box="[1097,1130,192,215]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">ips</emphasis>
pushing lateral, and cupule
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFF556081FF2DFF53" box="[151,173,229,253]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">ih</emphasis>
pushing anterolateral to cupule
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFDD06081FDB6FF53" box="[530,566,229,253]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">iad</emphasis>
(
<figureCitation id="EAE72A44CC3DFFAAFD876081FD16FF53" box="[581,662,229,253]" captionStart="FIGURE 19" captionStartId="24.[151,250,1989,2012]" captionTargetBox="[360,1231,211,1948]" captionTargetId="figure@24.[322,1257,193,1956]" captionTargetPageId="24" captionText="FIGURE 19. Oribatula tibialis, anogenital region, legs partially drawn, scale bar 100 µm. (A) Deutonymph; (B) tritonymph." httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/208471/files/figure.png" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Fig. 19</figureCitation>
B). Gland opening
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFCAB6081FC0DFF53" box="[873,909,229,253]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">gla</emphasis>
lateroventral to seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFBB46081FB0CFF53" box="[1142,1164,229,253]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">lp</emphasis>
. Anogenital region with few longitudinal folds. Setation of tibia I and tarsus I of tritonymph (
<figureCitation id="EAE72A44CC3DFFAAFC5A616DFC69FE8F" box="[920,1001,265,289]" captionStart="FIGURE 10" captionStartId="13.[151,250,1983,2006]" captionTargetBox="[218,1395,194,1948]" captionTargetId="figure@13.[185,1407,177,1978]" captionTargetPageId="13" captionText="FIGURE 10. Tarsus I and part of tibia I of tritonymph, antiaxial aspect, scale bar 10 µm. (A) Phauloppia lucorum; (B) Ph. lucorum, part of tarsus, dorsal aspect; (C) Lucoppia burrowsi; (D) Oribatula tibialis; some setae are not illustrated." httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/208465/files/figure.png" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Fig. 10</figureCitation>
D) similar to that of
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFB0C616DFAD8FE8F" box="[1230,1368,265,289]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Phauloppia" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="lucorum">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFB0C616DFB6DFE8F" box="[1230,1261,265,289]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Ph</emphasis>
.
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFB39616DFAD8FE8F" box="[1275,1368,265,289]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">lucorum</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
.
</paragraph>
<caption id="26A36649CC33FFA4FF5567EFFAE0F80C" box="[151,1376,1931,1954]" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/208468/files/figure.png" pageId="20" pageNumber="21" targetBox="[293,1292,205,1892]" targetPageId="20">
<paragraph id="726336C1CC33FFA4FF5567EFFAE0F80C" blockId="20.[151,1376,1931,1954]" box="[151,1376,1931,1954]" pageId="20" pageNumber="21">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC33FFA4FF5567EFFE9FF80F" bold="true" box="[151,287,1931,1954]" pageId="20" pageNumber="21">FIGURE 15.</emphasis>
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC33FFA4FEE767E8FE56F80C" box="[293,470,1932,1954]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Oribatula" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="20" pageNumber="21" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="tibialis">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC33FFA4FEE767E8FE56F80C" box="[293,470,1932,1954]" italics="true" pageId="20" pageNumber="21">Oribatula tibialis</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
, adult. (A) Dorsal aspect, legs partially drawn, scale bar 50 µm; (B) apical part of seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC33FFA4FA8567E8FAD9F80C" box="[1351,1369,1932,1954]" italics="true" pageId="20" pageNumber="21">le</emphasis>
.
</paragraph>
</caption>
<caption id="26A36649CC32FFA5FF5567C3FA1DF813" box="[151,1437,1959,1982]" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/208469/files/figure.png" pageId="21" pageNumber="22" targetBox="[182,1370,219,1897]" targetPageId="21">
<paragraph id="726336C1CC32FFA5FF5567C3FA1DF813" blockId="21.[151,1437,1959,1982]" box="[151,1437,1959,1982]" pageId="21" pageNumber="22">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC32FFA5FF5567C3FE9FF813" bold="true" box="[151,287,1959,1982]" pageId="21" pageNumber="22">FIGURE 16.</emphasis>
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC32FFA5FEE667C3FE54F813" box="[292,468,1959,1981]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Oribatula" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="21" pageNumber="22" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="tibialis">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC32FFA5FEE667C3FE54F813" box="[292,468,1959,1981]" italics="true" pageId="21" pageNumber="22">Oribatula tibialis</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
, adult, female, legs partially drawn, scale bar 100 µm. (A) Lateral aspect; (B) anogenital region.
</paragraph>
</caption>
<caption id="26A36649CC31FFA6FF5567B6FC2DF847" box="[151,941,2002,2025]" pageId="22" pageNumber="23">
<paragraph id="726336C1CC31FFA6FF5567B6FC2DF847" blockId="22.[151,941,2002,2025]" box="[151,941,2002,2025]" pageId="22" pageNumber="23">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC31FFA6FF5567B6FE9FF846" bold="true" box="[151,287,2002,2025]" pageId="22" pageNumber="23">FIGURE 17.</emphasis>
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC31FFA6FEE767B7FE56F847" box="[293,470,2003,2025]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Oribatula" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="22" pageNumber="23" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="tibialis">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC31FFA6FEE767B7FE56F847" box="[293,470,2003,2025]" italics="true" pageId="22" pageNumber="23">Oribatula tibialis</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
, larva, legs partially drawn, scale bar 100 µm.
</paragraph>
</caption>
<caption id="26A36649CC30FFA7FF5567D1FF71F847" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/208470/files/figure.png" pageId="23" pageNumber="24" targetBox="[348,1220,225,1915]" targetPageId="23">
<paragraph id="726336C1CC30FFA7FF5567D1FF71F847" blockId="23.[151,1436,1973,2025]" pageId="23" pageNumber="24">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC30FFA7FF5567D1FE9FF864" bold="true" box="[151,287,1973,1996]" pageId="23" pageNumber="24">FIGURE 18.</emphasis>
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC30FFA7FEE767D1FE55F865" box="[293,469,1973,1995]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Oribatula" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="23" pageNumber="24" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="tibialis">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC30FFA7FEE767D1FE55F865" box="[293,469,1973,1995]" italics="true" pageId="23" pageNumber="24">Oribatula tibialis</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
, legs partially drawn, scale bar 100 µm. (A) Anal region of larva; (B) anogenital region of protonymph.
</paragraph>
</caption>
<caption id="26A36649CC3FFFA8FF5567A1FA0BF875" box="[151,1419,1989,2012]" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/208471/files/figure.png" pageId="24" pageNumber="25" targetBox="[360,1231,211,1948]" targetPageId="24">
<paragraph id="726336C1CC3FFFA8FF5567A1FA0BF875" blockId="24.[151,1419,1989,2012]" box="[151,1419,1989,2012]" pageId="24" pageNumber="25">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3FFFA8FF5567A1FE9FF875" bold="true" box="[151,287,1989,2012]" pageId="24" pageNumber="25">FIGURE 19.</emphasis>
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3FFFA8FEE767A2FE56F872" box="[293,470,1990,2012]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Oribatula" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="24" pageNumber="25" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="tibialis">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3FFFA8FEE767A2FE56F872" box="[293,470,1990,2012]" italics="true" pageId="24" pageNumber="25">Oribatula tibialis</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
, anogenital region, legs partially drawn, scale bar 100 µm. (A) Deutonymph; (B) tritonymph.
</paragraph>
</caption>
<caption id="26A36649CC3EFFA9FF5567A3FC6BF873" box="[151,1003,1991,2014]" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/208472/files/figure.png" pageId="25" pageNumber="26" targetBox="[309,1301,195,1934]" targetPageId="25">
<paragraph id="726336C1CC3EFFA9FF5567A3FC6BF873" blockId="25.[151,1003,1991,2014]" box="[151,1003,1991,2014]" pageId="25" pageNumber="26">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3EFFA9FF5567A3FEA0F873" bold="true" box="[151,288,1991,2014]" pageId="25" pageNumber="26">FIGURE 20.</emphasis>
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3EFFA9FEE767A3FE56F873" box="[293,470,1991,2013]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Oribatula" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="25" pageNumber="26" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="tibialis">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3EFFA9FEE767A3FE56F873" box="[293,470,1991,2013]" italics="true" pageId="25" pageNumber="26">Oribatula tibialis</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
, tritonymph, legs partially drawn, scale bar 100 µm.
</paragraph>
</caption>
<paragraph id="726336C1CC3DFFAAFF0B6149FF57FE1F" blockId="26.[151,1436,151,1488]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFF0B6149FD40FEE8" bold="true" box="[201,704,301,326]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Summary of ontogenetic transformations.</emphasis>
In the larva seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFC47614BFC1DFEE8" box="[901,925,303,326]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">ro</emphasis>
is longer than setae
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFB4B6149FB1DFEEB" box="[1161,1181,301,325]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">le</emphasis>
and
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFB14614BFB6CFEE8" box="[1238,1260,303,326]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">in</emphasis>
, in the nymphs seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFF0E6136FF62FEC7" box="[204,226,338,361]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">in</emphasis>
is longer than setae
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFE106136FE69FEC7" box="[466,489,338,361]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">ro</emphasis>
and
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFDE76135FDB9FEC7" box="[549,569,337,361]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">le</emphasis>
, while in the adult seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFC936135FCE5FEC7" box="[849,869,337,361]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">le</emphasis>
is longer than setae
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFB946136FBECFEC7" box="[1110,1132,338,361]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">ro</emphasis>
and
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFB6B6136FB3FFEC7" box="[1193,1215,338,361]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">in</emphasis>
. The bothridium is rounded in all instars and the sensillus has clavate head, which is more slender in the nymphs and adult than in the larva.
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="726336C1CC3DFFAAFF0B61D9FD1EFDC5" blockId="26.[151,1436,151,1488]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">
The larva has 11 pairs of gastronotal setae (
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFD7A61DAFD46FE78" box="[696,710,446,470]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">h</emphasis>
3 absent), the nymphs have 14 pairs (gained
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFB7E61D9FB4AFE7B" box="[1212,1226,445,469]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">h</emphasis>
3,
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFB2361DBFB6FFE78" box="[1249,1263,447,470]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">p</emphasis>
1 and
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFAF261DBFABEFE78" box="[1328,1342,447,470]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">p</emphasis>
2), while the adult loses seta
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFEB26181FEFCFE52" box="[368,380,485,508]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">c</emphasis>
3, and 13 pairs of setae remain. Lyrifissure
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFC996181FCF1FE52" box="[859,881,485,508]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">ia</emphasis>
is located as in
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFBE66180FB2FFE52" box="[1060,1199,484,508]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Phauloppia" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="lucorum">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFBE66180FBC3FE52" box="[1060,1091,484,508]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Ph</emphasis>
.
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFB906180FB2FFE52" box="[1106,1199,484,508]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">lucorum</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
. The formula of gastronotal setae in
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFE956268FE4AFD8D" box="[343,458,523,547]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Oribatula" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="tibialis">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFE956268FEEBFD8D" box="[343,363,524,547]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">O</emphasis>
.
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFEBE626FFE4AFD8D" box="[380,458,523,547]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">tibialis</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
is
<date id="06621001CC3DFFAAFE2D626FFDFBFD8D" box="[495,635,523,547]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" value="1914-11-14" valueMax="1914-11-14" valueMin="1914-11-14">11-14-14-14</date>
-13 (larva to adult), that of segments PS AN is 22222-0333-022. The formulae of coxisternal, genital and aggenital setae are similar as in
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFC4E624BFB95FDE9" box="[908,1045,559,583]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Phauloppia" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="lucorum">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFC4E624BFC2BFDE9" box="[908,939,559,583]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Ph</emphasis>
.
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFC7A624BFB95FDE9" box="[952,1045,559,583]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">lucorum</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
(
<tableCitation id="3F5E037ACC3DFFAAFBE6624BFBFAFDE9" box="[1060,1146,559,583]" captionStart="TABLE 2" captionStartId="18.[151,235,152,173]" captionTargetBox="[151,1436,301,1204]" captionTargetPageId="18" captionText="TABLE 2. Chosen morphological characters of Phauloppia lucorum, Lucoppia burrowsi, Oribatula tibialis, Liebstadia similis and Scheloribates latipes." httpUri="http://table.plazi.org/id/26A36649CC35FFA2FF5560FCFE1DFF62" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" tableUuid="26A36649CC35FFA2FF5560FCFE1DFF62">Table 2</tableCitation>
), all formulae are consistent with those described by
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFE126237FD19FDC5" author="Grandjean" box="[464,665,595,619]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Grandjean, F. (1949) Formules anales, gastronotiques, genitales et aggenitales du developpement numerique des poils chez les Oribates. Bulletin de la Societe Zoologique de France, 74, 201 - 225." type="journal article" year="1949">Grandjean (1949)</bibRefCitation>
.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="3AC6654ACC3DFFAAFF0B6212FE7CFC7D" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" type="distribution">
<paragraph id="726336C1CC3DFFAAFF0B6212FE7CFC7D" blockId="26.[151,1436,151,1488]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFF0B6212FE75FD21" bold="true" box="[201,501,630,655]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Distribution and ecology</emphasis>
.
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFDC56213FD4EFD21" box="[519,718,631,655]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Oribatula" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="tibialis">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFDC56213FD4EFD21" box="[519,718,631,655]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Oribatula tibialis</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
is a Holarctic species (
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFC276213FBF7FD21" author="Subias" box="[997,1143,631,655]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Subias, L. S. (2004) Listado sistematico, sinonimico y biogeografico de los Acaros Oribatidos (Acariformes, Oribatida) del mundo (1758 - 2002). Graellsia 60, 3 - 305. Online version accessed in February 2011, 558 pp; http: // www. ucm. es / info / zoo / Artropodos / Catalogo. pdf." type="book chapter" year="2004">Subías 2004</bibRefCitation>
, 2011;
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFB126213FA0FFD21" author="Weigmann" box="[1232,1423,631,655]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Weigmann, G. (2006) Hornmilben (Oribatida). In: Dahl, F. (Ed.), Die Tierwelt Deutschland und der angrenzenden Meeresteile, 76. Teil. Goecke &amp; Evers, Keltern, p. 1 - 520." type="book chapter" year="2006">Weigmann 2006</bibRefCitation>
), which is considered to be eurytopic, but prefers forest ecosystems (
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFC5E62FFFBC3FD1D" author="Schuster" box="[924,1091,667,691]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Schuster, R. (1960) Uber die Okologie und Verbreitung von Bodenmilben (Oribatei) am Alpen-Ostrand, insbesondere in der Steiermark. Mitteilungen des Naturwissenschaftlichen Vereines fur Steiermark, 90, 132 - 149." type="journal article" year="1960">Schuster 1960</bibRefCitation>
;
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFB9362FFFA82FD1D" author="Wallwork" box="[1105,1282,667,691]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Wallwork, J. A. (1983) Oribatids in forest ecosystems. Annual Review of Entomology, 28, 109 - 130." type="journal article" year="1983">Wallwork 1983</bibRefCitation>
;
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFAD262FFFEAAFD79" author="Cianciolo" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Cianciolo, J. M. &amp; Norton, R. A. (2006) The ecological distribution of reproductive mode in oribatid mites, as related to biological complexity. Experimental and Applied Acarology, 40, 1 - 25." type="journal article" year="2006">Cianciolo &amp; Norton 2006</bibRefCitation>
). It is also considered to be a pioneer in a succession of microarthropods in decomposing birch leaves (
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFF5C6287FE35FD55" author="Hagvar" box="[158,437,739,763]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Hagvar, S. &amp; Kjondal, B. R. (1981) Succession, diversity and feeding habits of microarthropods in decomposing birch leaves. Pedobiologia, 22, 385 - 408." type="journal article" year="1981">Hågvar &amp; Kjøndal 1981</bibRefCitation>
) and in primary succession of soil mites in a Norwegian glacier foreland (
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFAC46287FF54FCB1" author="Hagvar" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Hagvar, S., Solhoy, T. &amp; Mong, C. E. (2009) Primary succession of soil mites (Acari) in a Norwegian glacier foreland, with emphasis on oribatid species. Arctic, Antarctic, &amp; Alpine Research, 41 (2), 219 - 227." type="journal article" year="2009">
Hågvar
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFAA06280FA15FD55" box="[1378,1429,739,763]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">et al</emphasis>
. 2009
</bibRefCitation>
). According to
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFE426363FDFEFCB1" box="[384,638,775,799]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Wunderle, I., Beck, L. &amp; Woas, S. (1990) Ein Beitrag zur Taxonomie und Okologie der Oribatulidae und Scheloribatidae (Acari, Oribatei) in Sudwestdeutschland. Andrias, 7, 15 - 60." type="journal article">
Wunderle
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFE36636CFDA5FCB1" box="[500,549,775,799]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">et al</emphasis>
. (1990)
</bibRefCitation>
it regularly colonizes the litter, but sporadically occurs in moss clumps and on tree trunks.
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFEB5634FFDBDFCED" box="[375,573,811,835]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Oribatula" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="tibialis">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFEB5634FFDBDFCED" box="[375,573,811,835]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Oribatula tibialis</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
was also found in bird feathers (
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFC7B634FFA99FCED" author="Krivolutsky" box="[953,1305,811,835]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Krivolutsky, D. A. &amp; Lebedeva, N. V. (2002) The oribatid mites and other microarthropods in the bird feathers. In: Tajovsky, K., Balik, V. &amp; Pizl, V. (Eds.), Studies on soil fauna in Central Europe. Institute of Soil Biology, Academy of Sciences, Ceske Budejovice, p. 101 - 104." type="book chapter" year="2002">Krivolutsky &amp; Lebedeva 2002</bibRefCitation>
) and in the nests of seabird (
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFE91632BFDB3FCC9" author="Coulson" box="[339,563,847,871]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Coulson, S. J., Moe, B., Monson, F. &amp; Gabrielsen, G. W. (2009) The invertebrate fauna of High Arctic seabird nests: the microarthropod community inhabiting nests on Spitsbergen, Svalbard. Polar Biology, 32, 1041 - 1046." type="journal article" year="2009">
Coulson
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFE7B6334FE69FCC9" box="[441,489,847,871]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">et al</emphasis>
. 2009
</bibRefCitation>
), like black-legged kittiwakes (
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFC506334FBC2FCC9" box="[914,1090,847,871]" class="Aves" family="Laridae" genus="Rissa" kingdom="Animalia" order="Charadriiformes" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="tridactyla">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFC506334FBC2FCC9" box="[914,1090,847,871]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Rissa tridactyla</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
L.), common eider (
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFAEB6334FE90FC25" class="Aves" family="Anatidae" genus="Somateria" kingdom="Animalia" order="Anseriformes" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="mollissima">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFAEB6334FE90FC25" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Somateria mollissima</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
L.) and glaucous gull (
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFDD56310FCE1FC25" authority="Gunnerus" authorityName="Gunnerus" box="[535,865,883,907]" class="Aves" family="Laridae" genus="Larus" kingdom="Animalia" order="Charadriiformes" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="hyperboreus">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFDD56310FD6BFC25" box="[535,747,883,907]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Larus hyperboreus</emphasis>
Gunnerus
</taxonomicName>
) in Kongsfjorden (
<collectingCountry id="0ACB7651CC3DFFAAFBF46317FB3EFC25" box="[1078,1214,883,907]" name="Svalbard and Jan Mayen" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Spitsbergen</collectingCountry>
,
<collectingCountry id="0ACB7651CC3DFFAAFB086317FAA9FC25" box="[1226,1321,883,907]" name="Norway" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Norway</collectingCountry>
). In populations of
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFEC463FCFEF6FC01" box="[262,374,919,943]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Oribatula" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="tibialis">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFEC463FCFE9AFC01" box="[262,282,920,943]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">O</emphasis>
.
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFEEA63F3FEF6FC01" box="[296,374,919,943]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">tibialis</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
females predominated (
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFD4163F3FCD7FC01" author="Domes" box="[643,855,919,943]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Domes, K., Scheu, S. &amp; Maraun, M. (2007) Resources and sex: Soil re-colonization by sexual and parthenogenetic oribatid mites. Pedobiologia, 51, 1 - 11." type="journal article" year="2007">
Domes
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFD1963FCFC8CFC01" box="[731,780,919,943]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">et al</emphasis>
. 2007
</bibRefCitation>
). It is an intermediate host of
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFB6063FCFAEDFC01" box="[1186,1389,920,943]" class="Cestoda" family="Anoplocephalidae" genus="Moniezia" kingdom="Animalia" order="Cyclophyllidea" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Platyhelminthes" rank="species" species="expansa">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFB6063FCFAEDFC01" box="[1186,1389,920,943]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Moniezia expansa</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
and
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFF5563D8FE78FC7D" authority="Svadzhyan 1962" authorityName="Svadzhyan" authorityYear="1962" box="[151,504,955,979]" class="Cestoda" family="Anoplocephalidae" genus="Moniezia" kingdom="Animalia" order="Cyclophyllidea" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Platyhelminthes" rank="species" species="benedeni">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFF5563D8FF2EFC7D" box="[151,174,956,979]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">M</emphasis>
.
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFF7E63DFFEA1FC7D" box="[188,289,955,979]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">benedeni</emphasis>
(
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFEF263DFFE70FC7D" author="Svadzhyan" box="[304,496,955,979]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Svadzhyan, P. K. (1962) Species composition of oribatids - intermediate hosts of Moniezia spp., their distribution and natural infestation in the Armyanskaya SSR. Zoologicheskij Sbornik Akademii Nauk Armenskoj SSR, 12, 163 - 178 (In Russian)." type="journal article" year="1962">Svadzhyan 1962</bibRefCitation>
)
</taxonomicName>
.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection id="3AC6654ACC3DFFAAFF0B63BBFB10FA7E" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" type="reference_group">
<paragraph id="726336C1CC3DFFAAFF0B63BBFBA2FB91" blockId="26.[151,1436,151,1488]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFF0B63BBFE13FC59" ID-CoL="7W6C4" box="[201,403,991,1015]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Oribatula" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="tibialis">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFF0B63BBFE13FC59" box="[201,403,991,1015]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Oribatula tibialis</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
is considered to be microphytophagous (
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFC4163BBFBAFFC59" author="Schuster" box="[899,1071,991,1015]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Schuster, R. (1960) Uber die Okologie und Verbreitung von Bodenmilben (Oribatei) am Alpen-Ostrand, insbesondere in der Steiermark. Mitteilungen des Naturwissenschaftlichen Vereines fur Steiermark, 90, 132 - 149." type="journal article" year="1960">Schuster 1960</bibRefCitation>
), and pollenivorous (
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFAEE63BBFF53FBB5" author="Wallwork" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Wallwork, J. A. (1983) Oribatids in forest ecosystems. Annual Review of Entomology, 28, 109 - 130." type="journal article" year="1983">Wallwork 1983</bibRefCitation>
). According to
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFE446467FD5AFBB5" author="Schneider" box="[390,730,1027,1051]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Schneider, K. &amp; Maraun, M. (2005) Feeding preferences among dark pigmented fungi (Dematiacea) indicate limited trophic niche differentiation of oribatid mites (Oribatida, Acari). Pedobiologia, 49, 61 - 67." type="journal article" year="2005">Schneider and Maraun (2005)</bibRefCitation>
it prefers dark pigmented fungi (
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFB9A6467FB37FBB5" box="[1112,1207,1027,1051]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Codinea</emphasis>
sp.,
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFB2D6467FAF3FBB5" box="[1263,1395,1027,1051]" class="Dothideomycetes" family="Pleosporaceae" genus="Ulocladium" kingdom="Fungi" order="Pleosporales" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Ascomycota" rank="genus">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFB2D6467FAF3FBB5" box="[1263,1395,1027,1051]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Ulocladium</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
sp. and
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFF046443FEF0FB91" box="[198,368,1063,1087]" class="Dothideomycetes" family="Dothioraceae" genus="Aureobasidium" kingdom="Fungi" order="Dothideales" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Ascomycota" rank="genus">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFF046443FEF0FB91" box="[198,368,1063,1087]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Aureobasidium</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
sp.) and belongs to fungivorous grazers (
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFCFD6443FB97FB91" author="Zaitsev" box="[831,1047,1063,1087]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Zaitsev, A. S., Chauvat, M., Pflug, A. &amp; Wolters, V. (2002) Oribatid mite diversity and community dynamics in a spruce chronosequence. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 34 (12), 1919 - 1927." type="journal article" year="2002">
Zaitsev
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFC59644CFC4CFB91" box="[923,972,1063,1087]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">et al</emphasis>
. 2002
</bibRefCitation>
).
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="726336C1CC3DFFAAFF0B6428FD3DFAEE" blockId="26.[151,1436,151,1488]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">
In few papers the age structure of
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFD926428FD42FBCD" ID-CoL="7W6C4" box="[592,706,1099,1123]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Oribatula" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="tibialis">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFD926428FDE4FBCD" box="[592,612,1100,1123]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">O</emphasis>
.
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFDB6642FFD42FBCD" box="[628,706,1099,1123]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">tibialis</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
have been investigated. In Ronda environs (Málaga,
<collectingCountry id="0ACB7651CC3DFFAAFAE0642FFAE3FBCD" box="[1314,1379,1099,1123]" name="Spain" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Spain</collectingCountry>
) this species was more abundant in cypress litter than in pine and larch litter, and in summer the juveniles were distinctly more abundant than the adults (
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFE3D64F7FCC3FB05" author="Seniczak" box="[511,835,1171,1195]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Seniczak, S. &amp; Seniczak, A. (2010 c) Oribatid mites (Acari, Oribatida) of selected habitats of south part of Andalusia (Spain). Biological Letters, Poznan, 47 (1), 29 - 35." type="journal article" year="2010" yearSuffix="c">Seniczak &amp; Seniczak 2010c</bibRefCitation>
). In Korčula Island (
<collectingCountry id="0ACB7651CC3DFFAAFBED64F7FB05FB05" box="[1071,1157,1171,1195]" name="Croatia" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Croatia</collectingCountry>
) it was also abundant in mosses, but the juveniles only slightly dominated the adults (Seniczak
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFC0264DCFC73FB61" box="[960,1011,1207,1231]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">et al</emphasis>
. 2011b). In Vilamorell near Borrassà (Cataluna,
<collectingCountry id="0ACB7651CC3DFFAAFED164BAFED6FB58" box="[275,342,1246,1270]" name="Spain" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Spain</collectingCountry>
, N42
<geoCoordinate id="17E85006CC3DFFAAFE5064BFFE5BFB58" box="[402,475,1243,1270]" direction="west" orientation="longitude" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" precision="555" value="-13.19">o13.19</geoCoordinate>
, E2
<geoCoordinate id="17E85006CC3DFFAAFDCA64BFFDD1FB58" box="[520,593,1243,1270]" direction="west" orientation="longitude" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" precision="555" value="-55.36">o55.36</geoCoordinate>
,
<quantity id="B5249B24CC3DFFAAFD9C64BAFD18FB58" box="[606,664,1246,1270]" metricMagnitude="1" metricUnit="m" metricValue="7.8" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" unit="m" value="78.0">78 m</quantity>
a. s. l)
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFD3264BBFCE2FB58" ID-CoL="7W6C4" box="[752,866,1246,1270]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Oribatula" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="tibialis">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFD3264BBFC84FB58" box="[752,772,1247,1270]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">O</emphasis>
.
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFCD664BAFCE2FB58" box="[788,866,1246,1270]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">tibialis</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
dominated the oribatid mite community in broom (
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFF626561FEB3FAB3" box="[160,307,1285,1309]" class="Magnoliopsida" family="Fabaceae" genus="Sarothamnus" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Plantae" order="Fabales" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Tracheophyta" rank="genus">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFF626561FEB3FAB3" box="[160,307,1285,1309]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">Sarothamnus</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
sp.) litter, reaching density of 325 individuals per
<quantity id="B5249B24CC3DFFAAFCBE6560FC51FAB2" box="[892,977,1284,1308]" metricMagnitude="0" metricUnit="m" metricValue="5.0" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" unit="cm" value="500.0">500 cm</quantity>
3, and dominance index
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFB246562FB7AFAB3" box="[1254,1274,1286,1309]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">D</emphasis>
= 69.4, with a large fraction of juveniles (67.7% of population).
</paragraph>
<paragraph id="726336C1CC3DFFAAFF0B6528FB10FA7E" blockId="26.[151,1436,151,1488]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">
The age structure of
<taxonomicName id="B5DC4D42CC3DFFAAFE7A6529FDAAFACB" ID-CoL="7W6C4" box="[440,554,1357,1381]" class="Arachnida" family="Oribatulidae" genus="Oribatula" kingdom="Animalia" order="Sarcoptiformes" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="tibialis">
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFE7A6529FE4CFACA" box="[440,460,1357,1380]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">O</emphasis>
.
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFE1E6529FDAAFACB" box="[476,554,1357,1381]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">tibialis</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
was also investigated in polluted soils. This species tolerated copper smelter pollution (
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFEC96514FE77FA26" author="Seniczak" box="[267,503,1392,1417]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Seniczak, S., Klimek, A., Gackowski, G., Kaczmarek, S. &amp; Zalewski, W. (1997) Effect of copper smelting air pollution on the mites (Acari) associated with young Scots pine forests polluted by copper smelting works at Glogow, Poland. II. Soil mites. Water, Air, &amp; Soil Pollution, 94 (3 - 4), 287 - 302." type="journal article" year="1997">
Seniczak
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFEB86516FE2CFA27" box="[378,428,1393,1417]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">et al</emphasis>
. 1997
</bibRefCitation>
), being abundant in highly polluted soil, with a large fraction of juveniles (85% of population). However, it was sensitive to alkaline pollution (
<bibRefCitation id="164D4B30CC3DFFAAFC8765F0FBB2FA02" author="Seniczak" box="[837,1074,1428,1453]" pageId="26" pageNumber="27" refString="Seniczak, S., Dabrowski, J., Klimek, A. &amp; Kaczmarek, S. (1999) Effects of alkaline deposition on the mites (Acari) associated with young Scots pine forests in Poland. Water, Air, &amp; Soil Pollution, 109 (1 - 4), 407 - 428." type="journal article" year="1999">
Seniczak
<emphasis id="40A8EAD3CC3DFFAAFC7665F2FC67FA03" box="[948,999,1429,1453]" italics="true" pageId="26" pageNumber="27">et al</emphasis>
. 1999
</bibRefCitation>
), and in the soil highly polluted by calcium it was not abundant and with smaller fraction of juveniles (37% of population).
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
</treatment>
</document>