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Parhyposomatides (Parhyposomata)
Superorder Acariformes
Order Sarcoptiformes
Suborder Oribatida
Supercohort Parhyposomatides (Parhypochthonioidea)
Common names: parhypochthonoid and gehypochthonoid oribatids
Probability of Encounter: low
Quarantine importance: No known quarantine importance.
 
Diagnosis.  White to tan,
sac-like oribatid mites with a transverse suture between setal rows D and E
and well developed lateral  opisthonotal glands.  
Subcapitulum usually stenarthric and chelicerae usually visible from above; rutella well developed.  Claws of adults bi- or tridactylous; palps 
with 4-5 free segments.  Macropyline, 3 pairs of genital papillae.
 
Similar taxa.  The transverse
suture between rows D and E should distinguish parhypochthonioids
from oribatid immatures
 
Ecology & Distribution. 
Parhypochthonioids can be common in dry soils, but are usually missed
because they resemble immature oribatids. 
Species of Gehypochthonius  species inhabit a number of dry soil types,
including dune sand.  Parhypochthonius
is found in treeholes, often in high numbers.
 
References
Colloff M &
Halliday B.  1998.  Oribatid Mites.  A Catalogue of Australian Genera and Species.  Monograph on Invertebrate Taxonomy Vol.
6.  CSIRO Publications: Melbourne.
Gilyarov MS & Krivolutsky DA (eds)  1975. 
Handbook for the Identification of Soil-inhabiting Mites, Sarcoptiformes.  Zoological Institute of the Academy of
Sciences: Petrograd [In Russian]
Hunt
G, Colloff MJ, Dallwitz M, Kelly J. & Walter DE.  1998.  An Interactive Key to the Oribatid mites of Australia.  CSIRO Publishing,
Collingwood, Victoria.  
(Compact Disk and User Guide).
Krantz GW. 
1978.  A Manual of Acarology.  OSU Bookstores: Corvallis.
Lee DC. 1982. Sarcoptiformes
(Acari) of South Australian soils. 3. Arthronotina (Cryptostigmata). Records of the South Australian Museum 18: 327-359.
Norton RN.  1990. 
Oribatida.  pp. 779-803, in DL
Dindal (ed) Soil Biology Guide. 
John Wiley & Sons: Brisbane.