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Mesostigmata

Mesostigmata is an order of mites belonging to the Parasitiformes. They are by far the largest group of Parasitiformes, with over 8,000 species in 130 families. Mesostigmata includes parasitic as well as free-living and predatory forms. They can be recognized by the single pair of spiracles positioned laterally on the body.

The family with the most described species is Phytoseiidae. Other families of note are Diplogyniidae, Macrochelidae, Pachylaelapidae, Uropodidae and Veigaiidae.

Amongst the best known species are Varroa destructor, an economically important parasite of honey bees, as well as the red mite (Dermanyssus gallinae), a parasite of poultry, most commonly chickens.

Description

Mesostigmata are mites ranging from 0.12–4 mm long (0.2–4 mm according to another source). They have a pair of stigmatal openings above legs III–IV usually associated with a peritrematal groove. The gnathosoma has a sclerotised ring around the bases of the chelicerae (basis capitulum). The palps have five (rarely four) free segments and usually a subdistal palp apotele. The chelicerae are three segmented. The subcapitulum usually has a median groove with transverse rows of one to many denticles. There are usually bifurcate or membranous corniculi present. Except in some parasitic species, a flagellate tritosternum is present. The coxae of the legs are freely articulating with the body. The intercoxal region has sternal and genital shield elements. Adults have a genital opening and either chelicerae modified for sperm transfer (if male) or a sperm-receiving structure (if female).

The above description applies to adults. Larvae have six legs, instead of the eight possessed by later stages, and may or may not feed. There are two nymphal stages (protonymph, deutonymph) that usually have lightly sclerotized dorsal, intercoxal and ventral plates.

Ecology

Many Mesostigmata are free-living predators of invertebrates that live in soil and litter, on the soil surface or on plants. There are also some that live in freshwater. Other Mesostigmata are parasites of vertebrates or arthropods, pollen and nectar feeders in flowers, fungus feeders, or saprophages that subsist on dead or decaying organic matter.

The soil-dwelling Mesostigmata are not as abundant as oribatids or prostigmatids that also occur in this habitat, but they are still ubiquitous in soil and may be important predators. Larger species tend to be predators of small arthropods or arthropod eggs, whereas smaller species prey on nematodes. Size of these mesostigmatans decreases with soil depth: plant litter and humus have large species such as Veigaia (Veigaiidae), the humus-soil interface has smaller species like Dendrolaelaps (Digamasellidae) and the mineral soil has the tiny Rhodacarellus (Rhodacaridae).

A few species are known from freshwater habitats, such as wet soil, phytotelmata, waterside vegetation and sewage filter-beds. These appear to move by crawling as no species are known to swim. Some species are known to prey on mosquito eggs and one species was reared on a diet of nematodes.

The parasitic Mesostigmata are mostly in superfamily Dermanyssoidea. These include parasites of invertebrates (e.g. Varroidae) and of vertebrates (other families), as well as both ectoparasites (external) and endoparasites (internal).

Phoresy, the temporary attachment of a smaller animal to a larger one for travel, is common in the Mesostigmata. For example, the freshwater species are phoretic on flies of families Tipulidae, Ceratopogonidae, and Culicidae.

Economic importance

Varroa destructor (Varroidae) is a major pest of honey bees. It harms bees both directly by feeding on fat body tissue, and indirectly by transmitting viruses.

Similarly, the red mite (Dermanyssus gallinae) feeds on the blood of birds, including poultry (chickens, turkeys, ducks) and wild birds. It reduces animal health, welfare and production.

In agriculture, soil-dwelling mesostigmatans are important predators of nematodes, springtails and insect larvae, while plant-dwelling mesostigmatans control pests such as spider mites.

Evolution

The oldest known record of the group is an indeterminate Sejidae deutonymph from the mid-Cretaceous (Albian-Cenomanian) aged Burmese amber of Myanmar.

Taxonomy

Taxonomy to families (Beaulieu 2011). Genus and species counts fluctuate over time.

Order Mesostigmata <small>G. Canestrini, 1891</small>
: Suborder Monogynaspida <small>Camin & Gorirossi, 1955</small>
:: Infraorder Gamasina <small>Kramer, 1881</small>
::: Hyporder Arctacariae <small>Johnston, 1982</small>
:::: Superfamily Arctacaroidea <small>Evans, 1955</small>
::::: Family Arctacaridae <small>Evans, 1955</small> (2 genera, 6 species)
::: Hyporder Dermanyssiae <small>Evans & Till, 1979</small>
:::: Superfamily Ascoidea <small>Voigts & Oudemans, 1905</small>
::::: Family Ameroseiidae <small>Evans, 1961</small> (10 genera, 148 species)
::::: Family Ascidae <small>Voigts & Oudemans, 1905</small> (17 genera, 338 species)
::::: Family Melicharidae <small>Hirschmann, 1962</small> (12 genera, 201 species)
:::: Superfamily Dermanyssoidea <small>Kolenati, 1859</small>
::::: Family Dasyponyssidae <small>Fonseca, 1940</small> (2 genera, 2 species)
::::: Family Dermanyssidae <small>Kolenati, 1859</small> (2 genera, 26 species)
::::: Family Entonyssidae <small>Ewing, 1923</small> (9 genera, 27 species)
::::: Family Haemogamasidae <small>Oudemans, 1926</small> (5 genera, 78 species)
::::: Family Halarachnidae <small>Oudemans, 1906</small> (7 genera, 43 species)
::::: Family Hystrichonyssidae <small>Keegan, Yunker & Baker, 1960</small> (1 genus, 1 species)
::::: Family Iphiopsididae <small>Kramer, 1886</small> (14 genera, 68 species)
::::: Family Ixodorhynchidae <small>Ewing, 1923</small> (6 genera, 43 species)
::::: Family Laelapidae <small>Berlese, 1892</small> (90 genera, 1316 species)
::::: Family Larvamimidae <small>Elzinga, 1993</small> (6 genera, 43 species)
::::: Family Macronyssidae <small>Oudemans, 1936</small> (34 genera, 233 species)
::::: Family Manitherionyssidae <small>Radovsky & Yunker, 1971</small> (1 genus, 1 species)
::::: Family Omentolaelapidae <small>Fain, 1961</small> (1 genus, 1 species)
::::: Family Rhinonyssidae <small>Trouessart, 1895</small> (8 genera, 510 species)
::::: Family Spelaeorhynchidae <small>Oudemans, 1902</small> (1 genus, 7 species)
::::: Family Spinturnicidae <small>Oudemans, 1901</small> (12 genera, 101 species)
::::: Family Varroidae <small>Delfinado & Baker, 1974</small> (2 genera, 6 species)
:::: Superfamily Eviphidoidea <small>Berlese, 1913</small>
::::: Family Eviphididae <small>Berlese, 1913</small> (19 genera, 108 species)
::::: Family Leptolaelapidae <small>Karg, 1978</small> (12 genera, 48 species)
::::: Family Macrochelidae <small>Vitzthum, 1930</small> (20 genera, 470 species)
::::: Family Pachylaelapidae <small>Berlese, 1913</small> (26 genera, 199 species)
::::: Family Parholaspididae <small>Evans, 1956</small> (12 genera, 96 species)
:::: Superfamily Phytoseioidea <small>Berlese, 1916</small>
::::: Family Blattisociidae <small>Garman, 1948</small> (11 genera, 369 species)
::::: Family Otopheidomenidae <small>Treat, 1955</small> (10 genera, 28 species)
::::: Family Phytoseiidae <small>Berlese, 1916</small> (90 genera, 2300 species)
::::: Family Podocinidae <small>Berlese, 1913</small> (2 genera, 25 species)
:::: Superfamily Rhodacaroidea <small>Oudemans, 1902</small>
::::: Family Digamasellidae <small>Evans, 1957</small> (13 genera, 261 species)
::::: Family Halolaelapidae <small>Karg, 1965</small> (4 genera, 80 species)
::::: Family Laelaptonyssidae <small>Womersley, 1956</small> (1 genus, 6 species)
::::: Family Ologamasidae <small>Ryke, 1962</small> (45 genera, 452 species)
::::: Family Rhodacaridae <small>Oudemans, 1902</small> (15 genera, 148 species)
::::: Family Teranyssidae <small>Halliday, 2006</small> (1 genus, 1 species)
:::: Superfamily Veigaioidea <small>Oudemans, 1939</small>
::::: Family Veigaiidae <small>Oudemans, 1939</small> (4 genera, 95 species)
::: Hyporder Epicriiae <small>Kramer, 1885</small>
:::: Superfamily Epicrioidea <small>Berlese, 1885</small>
::::: Family Epicriidae <small>Berlese, 1885</small> (4 genera, 48 species)
:::: Superfamily Heatherelloidea <small>Walter, 1997</small>
::::: Family Heatherellidae <small>Walter, 1997</small> (1 genus, 2 species)
:::: Superfamily Zerconoidea <small>G. Canestrini, 1891</small>
::::: Family Coprozerconidae <small>Moraza & Lindquist, 1999</small> (1 genus, 1 species)
::::: Family Zerconidae <small>G. Canestrini, 1891</small> (36 genera, 390, species)
::: Hyporder Parasitiae <small>Evans & Till, 1979</small>
:::: Superfamily Parasitoidea <small>Oudemans, 1901</small>
::::: Family Parasitidae <small>Oudemans, 1901</small> (35 genera, 426 species)
:: Infraorder Uropodina <small>Kramer, 1881</small>
:::: Family Dithinozerconidae <small>Ainscough, 1979</small>
::: Superfamily Diarthrophalloidea <small>Trägårdh, 1946</small>
:::: Family Diarthrophallidae <small>Trägårdh, 1946</small> (22 genera, 63 species)
::: Superfamily Microgynioidea <small>Trägårdh, 1942</small>
:::: Family Microgyniidae <small>Trägårdh, 1942</small> (2 genera, 4 species)
:::: Family Nothogynidae <small>Walter & Krantz, 1999</small> (1 genus, 2 species)
::: Superfamily Thinozerconoidea <small>Halbert, 1915</small>
:::: Family Protodinychidae <small>Evans, 1957</small> (1 genus, 3 species)
:::: Family Thinozerconidae <small>Halbert, 1915</small> (1 genus, 1 species)
::: Superfamily Uropodoidea <small>Kramer, 1881</small>
:::: Family Baloghjkaszabiidae <small>Hirschmann, 1979</small> (1 genus, 3 species)
:::: Family Brasiluropodidae <small>Hirschmann, 1979</small> (2 genera, 18 species)
:::: Family Cillibidae <small>Trägårdh, 1944</small> (2 genera, 19 species)
:::: Family Clausiadinychidae <small>Hirschmann, 1979</small> (1 genus, 4 species)
:::: Family Cyllibulidae <small>Hirschmann, 1979</small> (1 genus, 32 species)
:::: Family Deraiophoridae <small>Trägårdh, 1952</small> (1 genus, 36 species)
:::: Family Dinychidae <small>Berlese, 1916</small> (1 genus, 34 species)
:::: Family Discourellidae <small>Baker & Wharton, 1952</small> (1 genus, 76 species)
:::: Family Eutrachytidae <small>Trägårdh, 1944</small> (1 genus, 36 species)
:::: Family Hutufeideriidae <small>Hirschmann, 1979</small> (1 genus, 9 species)
:::: Family Kaszabjbaloghiidae <small>Hirschmann, 1979</small> (1 genus, 6 species)
:::: Family Macrodinychidae <small>Hirschmann, 1979</small> (4 genera, 22 species)
:::: Family Metagynuridae <small>Balogh, 1943</small> (2 genera, 17 species)
:::: Family Nenteriidae <small>Hirschmann, 1979</small> (2 genera, 128 species)
:::: Family Oplitidae <small>Johnston, 1968</small> (8 genera, 163 species)
:::: Family Phymatodiscidae <small>Hirschmann, 1979</small> (1 genus, 10 species)
:::: Family Polyaspididae <small>Berlese, 1913</small> (1 genus, 16 species)
:::: Family Prodinychidae <small>Berlese, 1917</small> (3 genera, 16 species)
:::: Family Rotundabaloghiidae <small>Hirschmann, 1979</small> (4 genera, 165 species)
:::: Family Tetrasejaspidae <small>Hirschmann, 1979</small> (1 genus, 15 species)
:::: Family Trachytidae <small>Trägårdh, 1938</small> (7 genera, 108 species)
:::: Family Trachyuropodidae <small>Berlese, 1917</small> (17 genera, 99 species)
:::: Family Trematuridae <small>Berlese, 1917</small> (13 genera, 401 species)
:::: Family Trichocyllibidae <small>Hirschmann, 1979</small> (5 genera, 57 species)
:::: Family Trichouropodellidae <small>Hirschmann, 1979</small> (1 genus, 11 species)
:::: Family Trigonuropodidae <small>Hirschmann, 1979</small> (1 genus, 87 species)
:::: Family Uroactiniidae <small>Hirschmann & Zirngiebl-Nicol, 1964</small> (3 genera, 67 species)
:::: Family Urodiaspididae <small>Trägårdh, 1944</small> (3 genera, 26 species)
:::: Family Urodinychidae <small>Berlese, 1917</small> (13 genera, 267 species)
:::: Family Uropodidae <small>Kramer, 1881</small> (9 genera, 261 species)
: Suborder Sejida <small>Kramer, 1885</small>
:: Superfamily Heterozerconoidea <small>Berlese, 1892</small>
::: Family Discozerconidae <small>Berlese, 1910</small> (2 genera, 3 species)
::: Family Heterozerconidae <small>Berlese, 1892</small> (7 genera, 13 species)
:: Superfamily Sejoidea <small>Berlese, 1885</small>
::: Family Ichthyostomatogasteridae <small>Sellnick, 1953</small> (3 genera, 10 species)
::: Family Sejidae <small>Berlese, 1885</small> (5 genera, 46 species) (5 genera, 46 species)
::: Family Uropodellidae <small>Camin, 1955</small> (1 genus, 6 species)
: Suborder Trigynaspida <small>Camin & Gorirossi, 1955</small>
:: Infraorder Antennophorina <small>Camin & Gorirossi, 1955</small>
::: Superfamily Aenictequoidea <small>Kethley, 1977</small>
:::: Family Aenictequidae <small>Kethley, 1977</small> (1 genus, 1 species)
:::: Family Euphysalozerconidae <small>Kim, 2008</small> (1 genus, 1 species)
:::: Family Messoracaridae <small>Kethley, 1977</small> (2 genera, 3 species)
:::: Family Ptochacaridae <small>Kethley, 1977</small> (1 genus, 3 species)
::: Superfamily Antennophoroidea <small>Berlese, 1892</small>
:::: Family Antennophoridae <small>Berlese, 1892</small> (6 genera, 19 species)
::: Superfamily Celaenopsoidea <small>Berlese, 1892</small>
:::: Family Celaenopsidae <small>Berlese, 1892</small> (7 genera, 14 species)
:::: Family Costacaridae <small>Hunter, 1993</small> (1 genus, 1 species)
:::: Family Diplogyniidae <small>Trägårdh, 1941</small> (42 genera, 85 species)
:::: Family Euzerconidae <small>Trägårdh, 1938</small> (12 genera, 24 species)
:::: Family Megacelaenopsidae <small>Funk, 1975</small> (2 genera, 2 species)
:::: Family Neotenogyniidae <small>Kethley, 1974</small> (1 genus, 1 species)
:::: Family Schizogyniidae <small>Trägårdh, 1950</small> (6 genera, 10 species)
:::: Family Triplogyniidae <small>Funk, 1977</small> (2 genera, 11 species)
::: Superfamily Fedrizzioidea <small>Trägårdh, 1937</small>
:::: Family Fedrizziidae <small>Trägårdh, 1937</small> (3 genera, 34 species)
:::: Family Klinckowstroemiidae <small>Camin & Gorirossi, 1955</small> (4 genera, 36 species)
::: Superfamily Megisthanoidea <small>Berlese, 1914</small>
:::: Family Hoplomegistidae <small>Camin & Gorirossi, 1955</small> (1 genus, 7 species)
:::: Family Megisthanidae <small>Berlese, 1914</small> (1 genus, 30 species)
::: Superfamily Paramegistoidea <small>Trägårdh, 1946</small>
:::: Family Paramegistidae <small>Trägårdh, 1946</small> (5 genera, 30 species)
::: Superfamily Parantennuloidea <small>Willmann, 1941</small>
:::: Family Parantennulidae <small>Willmann, 1941</small> (3 genera, 5 species)
:::: Family Philodanidae <small>Kethley, 1977</small> (2 genera, 2 species)
:::: Family Promegistidae <small>Kethley, 1977</small> (1 genus, 1 species)
:: Infraorder Cercomegistina <small>Camin & Gorirossi, 1955</small>
::: Superfamily Cercomegistoidea <small>Trägårdh, 1937</small>
:::: Family Asternoseiidae <small>Vale, 1954</small> (2 genera, 3 species)
:::: Family Cercomegistidae <small>Trägårdh, 1937</small> (5 genera, 13 species)
:::: Family Davacaridae <small>Kethley, 1977</small> (2 genera, 4 species)
:::: Family Pyrosejidae <small>Lindquist & Moraza, 1993</small> (2 genera, 3 species)
:::: Family Saltiseiidae <small>Walter, 2000</small> (1 genus, 1 species)
:::: Family Seiodidae <small>Kethley, 1977</small> (1 genus, 1 species)
Other
Meliponopus palpifer <small>Fain & Flechtmann, 1985</small> has not yet been placed into a family.

References

External links