Rhodacaridae Oudemans, 1902

Rueda-Ramirez, Diana, Castilho, Raphael C. & De Moraes, Gilberto J., 2013, Mites of the superfamily Rhodacaroidea (Acari: Mesostigmata) from Colombia, with a key for the world species of Desectophis Karg (Ologamasidae), Zootaxa 3734 (5), pp. 521-535 : 528

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3734.5.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:75DB8E6B-670A-4B3B-95F7-27A9B2EBBDF2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6492395

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8C55878D-9B63-FFD6-FF6B-FF7BFD38FC7E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Rhodacaridae Oudemans, 1902
status

 

Family Rhodacaridae Oudemans, 1902 View in CoL

Genus Multidentorhodacarus Karg

Multidentorhodacarus Karg, 2000b: 144 .

Rhodacarus (Multidentorhodacarus) Shcherbak, 1980: 72 (nomen nudum). Rhodacarus (Multidentorhodacarus) .—Karg, 1996: 170 (nomen nudum). Rhodacarus (Multidentrhodacarus) [sic].—Karg, 1998: 186 (nomen nudum). Multidentorhodacarus .—Karg, 2000a: 259 (nomen nudum).

Multidentorhodacarus .—Castilho et al., 2012a: 36; Castilho et al., 2012b: 32. Type species: Rhodacarus denticulatus Berlese, 1920 , by original designation.

Notes on the genus. As mentioned by Castilho et al. (2012a) and Castilho et al. (2012b), the name Multidentorhodacarus was not made available by Shcherbak (1980) because a type species was not fixed for the subgenus (International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, Article 13.3). The name only became available when Karg (2000b) published a description of Multidentorhodacarus as a genus, stating its type species to be M. denticulatus (Berlese, 1920) . This genus was characterised by Castilho et al. (2012a, 2012b). Nine of the 18 currently known species of Multidentorhodacarus , including the new species described here, were described from Neotropical countries, namely Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba and Ecuador (Karg, 1998, 2000a, 2000b, 2000c; Karg & Schorlemmer, 2009; Castilho & Moraes, 2010); others have a very scattered distribution: Indonesia, Iran, New Caledonia, South Africa, Tajikistan, Uganda and USA (Berlese, 1920; Ryke, 1962; Loots, 1969; Shcherbak, 1980; Jordaan et al., 1988; Karg, 1996; Castilho et al., 2012a). These small and inconspicuous mites that could be much more widespread than presently known.

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