Amblyseius meridionalis Berlese, 1914

Faraji, Farid & Hoekstra, Paul H., 2021, Some new species records of the predatory mite family Phytoseiidae (Acari: Mesostigmata) from The Netherlands, Soil Organisms 93 (1), pp. 35-57 : 39-43

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.25674/so93iss1pp35

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10878755

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D0DF53-FFB5-2757-A465-FA34FDAE32D5

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Amblyseius meridionalis Berlese, 1914
status

 

Amblyseius meridionalis Berlese, 1914 View in CoL

For other names and synonyms see Demite et al. (2021)

( Fig. 4 View Figure 4 : A–E)

Female– Five specimens measured.

Idiosomal setal pattern: 10A:9B/JV–3:ZV.

Dorsal idiosoma ( Fig. 4A View Figure 4 ) – Dorsal shield 378 (360– 395) long and 247 (238–255) wide at j 6 level, with 19 pairs of dorsal setae (r 3 and R 1 included); dorsal shield setae smooth, except for Z 4 and Z 5, slightly serrated; lengths: j 1 29 (27–30), j 3 52 (51–52), j 4, j 5, z 5 5–6, j 6 7 (7–8), J 2 8 (8–9), J 5 13 (13–14), z 2 9, z 4 11 (10–11), z 5 8 (7–8), Z 1 10 (9–10), Z 4 116 (111–120), Z 5 219 (208–229), s 4 77 (74–79), S 2 11, S 4 11 (10–11), S5 13 (12–13); setae r 3 15 (14–16) and R 1 10 (9–11) on lateral integument; dorsal shield with 7 pairs of solenostomes (gd 1, gd 2, gd 4, gd 5, gd 6, gd 8, gd 9) and 12 pairs of small poroids.

Peritreme – Extending well beyond setae j 1 ( Fig. 4A View Figure 4 ).

Ventral idiosoma ( Fig. 4B View Figure 4 ) – Sternal shield wider than long, posterior margin slightly concave, smooth at the central area with a few lateral striae, 59 (57–62) long, 82 (81–82) wide at level of setae ST 2, three pairs of setae and two pairs of pores (iv 1 and iv 2), ST 1 32–34, ST 2 30– 33, ST 3 28–30; distances between ST 1 –ST 3 64 (63–65), ST 1 –ST 1 55 (54–56) and ST 2 –ST 2 72 (71–73); metasternal setae ST 4 28 and a pair of pores (iv 3) on small platelets; genital shield smooth width at widest point 85 (80–88), ST 5 30 (30–31); two pairs of metapodal shields, primary 28 (27–30) long and accessory 15–17 long; ventrianal shield pentagonal ( Fig. 4B View Figure 4 ), striated anterior to the ventrianal pores, length 121 (115–126), width at level of setae ZV 2, 100 (98–103), and width at level of paranal setae 77 (74–81); with three pairs of preanal setae (JV 1 20–21, JV 2 23–24, ZV 2 18–19); four pairs of setae surrounding ventrianal shield on integument (JV 4 10–12 JV 5 85 (80–87), ZV 1 17–19, ZV 3 9–10), five pairs of pores and one pair of small platelets surrounding ventrianal shield. Ventrianal shield with a pair of small round pores (gv 3) posteromesad to JV 2, distance between these pores 46 (40–51).

Spermatheca – Calyx bell-shaped 18 (17–19) long, 8 in diameter at the middle part of the calyx; atrium C-shaped ( Fig. 4C View Figure 4 ).

Chelicera – Fixed digit 28–29 long with 4 teeth and a pilus dentilis, the one close to pilus dentilis slightly larger; movable digit 31–32 long and smooth ( Fig. 4D View Figure 4 ).

Legs – Leg IV ( Fig. 4E View Figure 4 ) with three pointed macrosetae, SgeIV 89 (87–91), StiIV 72 (70–76), StIV 65 (65–66); length of macrosetae on other legs: SgeI 31 (30–32), SgeII 38 (37–40), SgeIII 42 (40–45); length of legs from the base of coxae to the tip of claws: leg I 411 (402–420), leg II 319 (307–330), leg III 310 (305–315), leg IV 417 (415–418); chaetotactic formulae of genua and tibiae I–II–III–IV with 10 (2-2/1, 2/1-2) – 7 (2-2/0, 2/0-1) – 7 (1-2/1, 2/0-1) – 7 (1-2/0, 2/1-1) and 10 (2-2/1, 2/1-2) – 7 (1-2/1, 1/1-1) – 7 (1-1/1, 2/1-1) – 6 (1-1/0, 2/1-1) setae respectively.

Distribution – Algeria, Azerbaijan, Canada, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Iran, Italy, Latvia, Moldova, Morocco, Poland, Spain, Switzerland, The Netherlands, Tunisia, Turkey, Ukraine and USA.

Specimen examined – Five females, 28 June 2010, unidentified weeds from a grassland, Sinderhoeve , near Renkum, The Netherlands (51°59’52.9”N 5°45’15.9”E), collector: Frank Bakker. GoogleMaps

Remarks – The characteristics of the specimens found in The Netherlands fits well with the re-descriptions of this species. Faraji et al. (2008, 2011) mentioned the movable digit of chelicera with one minute tooth while the Dutch specimens show it smooth.

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