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Holothyrida (Holothyrina, Tetrastigmata)
Superorder Parasitiformes
Order Holothyrida
Families: Holothyridae, Allothyridae, Neothyridae
Common names: holothyrans, holothyrids, allothyrids
Probability of Encounter: very low
Quarantine importance:
None. These mites are rare and of no known
quarantine importance, although some species are toxic if ingested.
Diagnosis. Adults orange, red, reddish brown to almost black, beetle-like with fully sclerotized
dome-shaped holodorsal shield
with short, broad peritremes above legs III and with or without one pair of
lateral ocelli; the holoventral shield encompasses a posterior pair of anal
valves each with ≥ 2 setae, and in the intercoxal region, a pair of
transverse, setose genital valves in the male and usually 4 setose genital
shields in the female. Tritosternum
present and flagelliform or absent; hypostome with ≥ 5 pairs of setae
(including palpcoxal); sclerotized gnathotectum absent. Chelicerae 3-segmented; palps 5-segmented;
coxae free.
Similar taxa. Other relatively large and heavily sclerotised mites occur in the Brachypylina, Monogynaspida (especially the Ologamasidae), and Trigynaspida, but none of these will have the short, broad peritrematal plates, more than 5 pairs of subcapitular setae, or a dense covering of short setae.
Ecology
& Distribution. Holothyrans can be found in
leaf litter, mosses, and under stones in moist forests from near sea level to
about 2000 m in elevation. Allothyrids
and some holothyrids are known to scavenge, but none have been demonstrated to
be predators. Field collections of Allothyrus in eastern Australia tend to have about equal
numbers of adult males and females.
Adults are lethargic animals that play dead when disturbed. Nymphs tend to be more active, and nymphal Allothyrus have a pair of large glands
that open on the dorso-lateral aspects of the idiosoma that excrete fluid when the
mites are annoyed. Adults of Holothyrus coccinella Gervais produce a
distasteful exudate that is reported to be fatal to fowl that eat them.
References
Domrow, R. 1955.
A second species of Holothyrus
(Acarina: Holothyroidea) from Australia.
Proc. Lin. Soc. N.S.W. 74:
159-162.
Johnston, D.E. 1982.
Acari. In: Parker, S.P.
(ed.) Synopsis and classification of
living organisms. McGraw-Hill, New
York, p. 111.
Krantz GW. 1978.
A Manual of Acarology.
OSU Bookstores: Corvallis.
Lee, D.C. and Southcott,
R.V. 1979. Spiders and other arachnids of South Australia. Extract from South Australian Yearbook,
1979, D.J. Woolman, Government Printer, South Australia, 15 pp.
Lehtinen, P.T. 1981.
New Holothyrina (Arachnida, Anactinotrichida) from New Guinea and South
America. Acarologia 22: 3-13.
Lehtinen, P.T. 1991.
Phylogeny and zoogeography of the Holothyrida. In: Dusabek, F. and Bukva, V. (eds.) Modern Acarology, Volume 2.
SPB Academic Publishers, The Hague, pp. 101-113.
Lehtinen, P.T. 1995.
Revision of the Old World HOLOTHYRIDAE (Arachnida: Anactinotrichida:
Holothyrina). Invert. Taxon. 9: 767-826.
Pugh, P.J.A., Evans, G.O.,
Fordy, M.R., and King, P.E. 1991. The functional morphology of the respiratory
system of the Holothyrida (= Tetrastigmata) Acari: Anactinotrichida. J.
Zool. Lond. 225: 153-172.
Walter DE and
Proctor HC. 1998. Feeding behaviour and phylogeny:
observations on early derivative Acari.
Experimental & Applied
Acarology 22: 39-50.
Womersley, H. 1935.
A species of Acarina of the genus Holothyrus
from Australia and New Zealand. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. 16: 154-157.