fbpx
Wikipedia

Halacaridae

Halacaridae is a family of meiobenthic mites found in marine, brackish, and freshwater habitats around the world. It includes more than 1100 described species belonging to 64 genera [1][2] It is the largest marine radiation of arachnids.[3]

Halacaridae
Agauopsis brevipalpus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Trombidiformes
Superfamily: Halacaroidea
Family: Halacaridae
Murray, 1877

Description and life cycle

Halacarids have four pairs of legs (as adults and nymphs; see below), of which the first two pairs point forwards and the last two pairs point backwards. This is a synapomorphy of the group. Another synapomorphy are four plates on the dorsal surface of the body, except for several genera with reduction of certain plates.[4]

The life cycle of halacarids consists of egg, larva, 1-3 nymphal stages (protonymph->deutonymph->tritonymph) and adult. Additionally, between each of the free-living stages (i.e. except for the egg) is a quiescent pupal stage.[5]

  • Eggs are usually deposited by an adult female in a substrate, with the help of an ovipositor.
  • Larvae have three pairs of legs, with each leg five-segmented, and lack a genital plate.
  • Protonymphs have four pairs of legs (as do all following stages), of which the fourth pair is five-segmented, and they usually have a distinct genital plate.
  • Deutonymphs and tritonymphs have each leg six-segmented.
  • Adults are often similar to the last nymphal stage, but they have an ovipositor (if female) or spermatopositor (if male).

Like mites in general, halacarids have a pair of palps. The palps usually have four segments each, but they are three-segmented in Simognathus and just two-segmented in Acaromantis.[3]

Halacarids of subfamily Copidognathinae have just a single nymphal stage. Additionally, the number of genital papillae is reduced to a single pair.[3]

The subfamily Rhombognathinae, which is algivorous, can be recognised by the dark green or almost black pigment inside their digestive system. This pigment is partially digested chlorophyll from algae.[3]

Ecology

Halacaridae occur in various habitats including sandy beaches, tidal sediment, interstitial spaces, hydrothermal vents, mangroves, salt marshes and on larger animals.[2][6] They spend their entire lives on a substrate such as attached algae or sand.[3]

Most species and genera are predators, though Rhombognathinae are instead algivores.[3] In freshwater halacarids, some species are restricted to crayfish gill chambers, implying a parasitic lifestyle, while Lobohalacarus weberi is a scavenger that feeds on dead nematodes and oligochaetes but not on live ones.[7]

Phylogeny

Recent analyses place Halacaridae as the sister group to Parasitengona.[8][9] Within the group, algivorous Rhombognathinae consists of two lineages (Rhombognathus+Isobactrus and Rhombognathides+Metarhombognathus), meaning the habit of algivory has evolved two independent times.[3]

Genera

  • Acanthohalacarus Bartsch, 2001
  • Acanthopalpus Makarova, 1978
  • Acarochelopodia Angelier, 1954
  • Acaromantis Trouessart & Neumann, 1893
  • Acarothrix Bartsch, 1990
  • Actacarus Schulz, 1937
  • Agaue Lohmann, 1889
  • Agauides Bartsch, 1988
  • Agauopsis Viets, 1927
  • Anomalohalacarus Newell, 1949
  • Arhodeoporus Newell, 1947
  • Astacopsiphagus Viets, 1931
  • Bathyhalacarus Sokolov & Jankovskaja, 1968
  • Bradyagaue Newell, 1971
  • Camactognathus Newell, 1984
  • Coloboceras Trouessart, 1889
  • Colobocerasides Viets, 1950
  • Copidognathides Bartsch, 1976
  • Copidognathus Trouessart, 1888
  • Corallihalacarus Otto, 1999
  • Enterohalacarus Viets, 1938
  • Halacarellus Viets, 1927
  • Halacaroides Bartsch, 1981
  • Halacaropsis Bartsch, 1996
  • Halacarus Gosse, 1855
  • Halixodes Brucker & Trouessart, 1899
  • Hamohalacarus Walter, 1931
  • Himejacarus Imamura, 1957
  • Isobactrus Newell, 1947
  • Limnohalacarus Walter, 1917
  • Lobohalacarus Viets, 1939
  • Lohmannella Trouessart, 1901
  • Metarhombognathus
  • Mictognathus Newell, 1984
  • Parasoldanellonyx Viets, 1929
  • Parhalixodes Laubier, 1960
  • Pelacarus Bartsch, 1986
  • Peregrinacarus Bartsch, 1999
  • Plegadognathus Morselli, 1981
  • Porohalacarus Thor, 1922
  • Porolohmannella Viets, 1933
  • Rhombognathides Viets, 1927
  • Rhombognathus Trouessart, 1888
  • Ropohalacarus Bartsch, 1989
  • Scaptognathides Monniot, 1972
  • Scaptognathus Trouessart, 1889
  • Simognathus Trouessart, 1889
  • Soldanellonyx Walter, 1917
  • Spongihalacarus Otto, 2000
  • Stygohalacarus Viets, 1934
  • Thalassacarus Newell, 1949
  • Thalassarachna Packard, 1871
  • Thalassophthirius Bartsch, 1988
  • Troglohalacarus Viets, 1937
  • Tropihalacarus Otto & Bartsch, 1999
  • Werthella Lohmann, 1907
  • Werthelloides Bartsch, 1986
  • Winlundia Newell, 1984
  • Xenohalacarus Otto, 2000

References

  1. ^ Durucan, Furkan (2018). "New record of the genus Scaptognathus (Acari: Halacaridae) from Antalya with a checklist of marine halacarid mites of Turkey". Turkish Journal of Zoology. 42 (4): 499–507. doi:10.3906/zoo-1803-6.
  2. ^ a b Bartsch, Ilse (2009). "Checklist of marine and freshwater halacarid mite genera and species (Halacaridae: Acari) with notes on synonyms, habitats, distribution and descriptions of the taxa" (PDF). Zootaxa. 1998: 1–170. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.1998.1.1.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Pepato, Almir R.; Vidigal, Teofânia H.D.A.; Klimov, Pavel B. (2018). "Molecular phylogeny of marine mites (Acariformes: Halacaridae), the oldest radiation of extant secondarily marine animals". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 129: 182–188. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2018.08.012.
  4. ^ Harvey, MS (1989). "Pezidae, a new freshwater mite family from Australia (Acarina : Halacaroidea)". Invertebrate Systematics. 3 (6): 771. doi:10.1071/it9890771. ISSN 1445-5226.
  5. ^ Bartsch, Ilse (2015-02-17). "The genital area of Halacaridae (Acari), life stages and development of morphological characters and implication on the classification". Zootaxa. 3919 (2): 201. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.3919.2.1. ISSN 1175-5334.
  6. ^ Bartsch, I. (2003). "Mangrove halacarid fauna (Halacaridae, Acari) of the Dampier region, Western Australia, with description of five new species". Journal of Natural History. 37 (15): 1855–1877. doi:10.1080/00222930110089184. ISSN 0022-2933.
  7. ^ Proctor, H.C. (2009), "Hydrachnida (Water Mites)", Encyclopedia of Inland Waters, Elsevier, pp. 335–345, doi:10.1016/b978-012370626-3.00176-9, ISBN 978-0-12-370626-3, retrieved 2022-10-14
  8. ^ Pepato, A R; Klimov, P B (2015). "Origin and higher-level diversification of acariform mites – evidence from nuclear ribosomal genes, extensive taxon sampling, and secondary structure alignment". BMC Evolutionary Biology. 15 (1): 178. doi:10.1186/s12862-015-0458-2. ISSN 1471-2148. PMC 4557820. PMID 26330076.
  9. ^ Dabert, Miroslawa; Proctor, Heather; Dabert, Jacek (2016). "Higher-level molecular phylogeny of the water mites (Acariformes: Prostigmata: Parasitengonina: Hydrachnidiae)". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 101: 75–90. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2016.05.004.

Further reading

  • Breene, R.G.; Dean, D. Allen; Edwards, G.B.; Hebert, Blain; Levi, Herbert W.; Manning, Gail (2003). Common Names of Arachnids. Vol. Fifth Edition. American Tarantula Society. ISBN 1-929427-11-5.
  • Capinera, John L., ed. (2008). Encyclopedia of Entomology. Springer. ISBN 978-1402062421.
  • Jackman, John A. (2002). A Field Guide to Spiders and Scorpions of Texas. Gulf Publishing.
  • Krantz, G.W.; Walter, D.E., eds. (2009). A Manual of Acarology. Vol. 3rd Edition. Texas Tech University Press. ISBN 9780896726208.

halacaridae, family, meiobenthic, mites, found, marine, brackish, freshwater, habitats, around, world, includes, more, than, 1100, described, species, belonging, genera, largest, marine, radiation, arachnids, agauopsis, brevipalpusscientific, classificationkin. Halacaridae is a family of meiobenthic mites found in marine brackish and freshwater habitats around the world It includes more than 1100 described species belonging to 64 genera 1 2 It is the largest marine radiation of arachnids 3 HalacaridaeAgauopsis brevipalpusScientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ArthropodaSubphylum ChelicerataClass ArachnidaOrder TrombidiformesSuperfamily HalacaroideaFamily HalacaridaeMurray 1877 Contents 1 Description and life cycle 2 Ecology 3 Phylogeny 4 Genera 5 References 6 Further readingDescription and life cycle EditHalacarids have four pairs of legs as adults and nymphs see below of which the first two pairs point forwards and the last two pairs point backwards This is a synapomorphy of the group Another synapomorphy are four plates on the dorsal surface of the body except for several genera with reduction of certain plates 4 The life cycle of halacarids consists of egg larva 1 3 nymphal stages protonymph gt deutonymph gt tritonymph and adult Additionally between each of the free living stages i e except for the egg is a quiescent pupal stage 5 Eggs are usually deposited by an adult female in a substrate with the help of an ovipositor Larvae have three pairs of legs with each leg five segmented and lack a genital plate Protonymphs have four pairs of legs as do all following stages of which the fourth pair is five segmented and they usually have a distinct genital plate Deutonymphs and tritonymphs have each leg six segmented Adults are often similar to the last nymphal stage but they have an ovipositor if female or spermatopositor if male Like mites in general halacarids have a pair of palps The palps usually have four segments each but they are three segmented in Simognathus and just two segmented in Acaromantis 3 Halacarids of subfamily Copidognathinae have just a single nymphal stage Additionally the number of genital papillae is reduced to a single pair 3 The subfamily Rhombognathinae which is algivorous can be recognised by the dark green or almost black pigment inside their digestive system This pigment is partially digested chlorophyll from algae 3 Ecology EditHalacaridae occur in various habitats including sandy beaches tidal sediment interstitial spaces hydrothermal vents mangroves salt marshes and on larger animals 2 6 They spend their entire lives on a substrate such as attached algae or sand 3 Most species and genera are predators though Rhombognathinae are instead algivores 3 In freshwater halacarids some species are restricted to crayfish gill chambers implying a parasitic lifestyle while Lobohalacarus weberi is a scavenger that feeds on dead nematodes and oligochaetes but not on live ones 7 Phylogeny EditRecent analyses place Halacaridae as the sister group to Parasitengona 8 9 Within the group algivorous Rhombognathinae consists of two lineages Rhombognathus Isobactrus and Rhombognathides Metarhombognathus meaning the habit of algivory has evolved two independent times 3 Genera EditAcanthohalacarus Bartsch 2001 Acanthopalpus Makarova 1978 Acarochelopodia Angelier 1954 Acaromantis Trouessart amp Neumann 1893 Acarothrix Bartsch 1990 Actacarus Schulz 1937 Agaue Lohmann 1889 Agauides Bartsch 1988 Agauopsis Viets 1927 Anomalohalacarus Newell 1949 Arhodeoporus Newell 1947 Astacopsiphagus Viets 1931 Bathyhalacarus Sokolov amp Jankovskaja 1968 Bradyagaue Newell 1971 Camactognathus Newell 1984 Coloboceras Trouessart 1889 Colobocerasides Viets 1950 Copidognathides Bartsch 1976 Copidognathus Trouessart 1888 Corallihalacarus Otto 1999 Enterohalacarus Viets 1938 Halacarellus Viets 1927 Halacaroides Bartsch 1981 Halacaropsis Bartsch 1996 Halacarus Gosse 1855 Halixodes Brucker amp Trouessart 1899 Hamohalacarus Walter 1931 Himejacarus Imamura 1957 Isobactrus Newell 1947 Limnohalacarus Walter 1917 Lobohalacarus Viets 1939 Lohmannella Trouessart 1901 Metarhombognathus Mictognathus Newell 1984 Parasoldanellonyx Viets 1929 Parhalixodes Laubier 1960 Pelacarus Bartsch 1986 Peregrinacarus Bartsch 1999 Plegadognathus Morselli 1981 Porohalacarus Thor 1922 Porolohmannella Viets 1933 Rhombognathides Viets 1927 Rhombognathus Trouessart 1888 Ropohalacarus Bartsch 1989 Scaptognathides Monniot 1972 Scaptognathus Trouessart 1889 Simognathus Trouessart 1889 Soldanellonyx Walter 1917 Spongihalacarus Otto 2000 Stygohalacarus Viets 1934 Thalassacarus Newell 1949 Thalassarachna Packard 1871 Thalassophthirius Bartsch 1988 Troglohalacarus Viets 1937 Tropihalacarus Otto amp Bartsch 1999 Werthella Lohmann 1907 Werthelloides Bartsch 1986 Winlundia Newell 1984 Xenohalacarus Otto 2000References Edit Durucan Furkan 2018 New record of the genus Scaptognathus Acari Halacaridae from Antalya with a checklist of marine halacarid mites of Turkey Turkish Journal of Zoology 42 4 499 507 doi 10 3906 zoo 1803 6 a b Bartsch Ilse 2009 Checklist of marine and freshwater halacarid mite genera and species Halacaridae Acari with notes on synonyms habitats distribution and descriptions of the taxa PDF Zootaxa 1998 1 170 doi 10 11646 zootaxa 1998 1 1 a b c d e f g Pepato Almir R Vidigal Teofania H D A Klimov Pavel B 2018 Molecular phylogeny of marine mites Acariformes Halacaridae the oldest radiation of extant secondarily marine animals Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 129 182 188 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2018 08 012 Harvey MS 1989 Pezidae a new freshwater mite family from Australia Acarina Halacaroidea Invertebrate Systematics 3 6 771 doi 10 1071 it9890771 ISSN 1445 5226 Bartsch Ilse 2015 02 17 The genital area of Halacaridae Acari life stages and development of morphological characters and implication on the classification Zootaxa 3919 2 201 doi 10 11646 zootaxa 3919 2 1 ISSN 1175 5334 Bartsch I 2003 Mangrove halacarid fauna Halacaridae Acari of the Dampier region Western Australia with description of five new species Journal of Natural History 37 15 1855 1877 doi 10 1080 00222930110089184 ISSN 0022 2933 Proctor H C 2009 Hydrachnida Water Mites Encyclopedia of Inland Waters Elsevier pp 335 345 doi 10 1016 b978 012370626 3 00176 9 ISBN 978 0 12 370626 3 retrieved 2022 10 14 Pepato A R Klimov P B 2015 Origin and higher level diversification of acariform mites evidence from nuclear ribosomal genes extensive taxon sampling and secondary structure alignment BMC Evolutionary Biology 15 1 178 doi 10 1186 s12862 015 0458 2 ISSN 1471 2148 PMC 4557820 PMID 26330076 Dabert Miroslawa Proctor Heather Dabert Jacek 2016 Higher level molecular phylogeny of the water mites Acariformes Prostigmata Parasitengonina Hydrachnidiae Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 101 75 90 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2016 05 004 Further reading EditBreene R G Dean D Allen Edwards G B Hebert Blain Levi Herbert W Manning Gail 2003 Common Names of Arachnids Vol Fifth Edition American Tarantula Society ISBN 1 929427 11 5 Capinera John L ed 2008 Encyclopedia of Entomology Springer ISBN 978 1402062421 Jackman John A 2002 A Field Guide to Spiders and Scorpions of Texas Gulf Publishing Krantz G W Walter D E eds 2009 A Manual of Acarology Vol 3rd Edition Texas Tech University Press ISBN 9780896726208 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Halacaridae amp oldid 1136094620, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.