Hemileius scrobina Berlese, 1916

Schatz, Heinrich, Fortini, Lorenzo, Fusco, Tommaso, Casale, Francesca, Jacomini, Carlo & Giulio, Andrea Di, 2021, Oribatid mites (Acari, Oribatida) from “ Parco Naturale delle Alpi Marittime ” (Piedmont, Italy), Zootaxa 5082 (6), pp. 501-540 : 529

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5082.6.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:34AFA5E3-A4BA-4D65-84B8-EBDA162F084B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5798394

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0399FB6B-B33B-A055-588D-FF74FB7C70ED

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Hemileius scrobina Berlese, 1916
status

 

Hemileius scrobina Berlese, 1916 View in CoL

Oribatula (Hemileius) scrobina Berlese 1916, p. 323 .

Hemileius scrobina Mahunka 1994a, p. 43 View in CoL , figs 20, 21.

Parco Naturale delle Alpi Marittime: AB, FRA, FAG, PAL sparse.

General distribution: Northern, southern? Italy; Italian Alps (Bergamo type locality); possible distribution in Monte Pollino Massif , Basilicata, Calabria ( Hemileius cf. scrobina, Bernini et al. 1987 ) .

Habitat preferences: unknown, found in moss (type locality, Berlese 1916, Hemileius cf. scrobina, Monte Pollino, Bernini et al. 1987 ); silvicolous (Alpi Marittime).

Remarks: Body length 490–570 µm. Notogaster pustulate, notogastral setae thin, short (~20–25 µm), difficult to detect (“ Pili in dorso et ad margines notogastri nulli, certe etiam maximarum amplificationum ope non conspicui ” Berlese 1916), Mahunka (1994a) drew short, well visible notogastral setae (“ Ten pairs of equally long, fine notogastral setae and four pairs of small sacculi present”). Apart from size, the studied specimens from the Maritime Alps lack morphological differences to the species descriptions ( Berlese 1916, Mahunka 1994a) and are considered to be conspecific. A minor difference is the body size. Berlese (1916) indicated a body size of 480 x 320 µm. Most specimens from the Maritime Alps are larger [length of males (n=5) 470–520 µm, females (n=8) 520–570 µm]; apparently Berlese studied a smaller male. Subías (2004) listed the species as Hemileius (Tuberemaeus) scrobinus without further discussion. He apparently based this hypothesis on the similar shape of the body surface of Tuberemaerus singularis Sellnick, 1930 . But the surface of the latter species has foveolae, whereas the notogaster of H. scrobina is pustulate. Moreover, the generic diagnosis of Tuberemaeus Sellnick, 1930 stresses the presence of two humps on the posterior notogaster ( Sellnick 1930) which are not present in H. scrobina (Mahunka 1994) . Therefore, we reject this assignment.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Sarcoptiformes

Family

Hemileiidae

Genus

Hemileius

Loc

Hemileius scrobina Berlese, 1916

Schatz, Heinrich, Fortini, Lorenzo, Fusco, Tommaso, Casale, Francesca, Jacomini, Carlo & Giulio, Andrea Di 2021
2021
Loc

Hemileius scrobina

Mahunka, S. 1994: 43
1994
Loc

Oribatula (Hemileius) scrobina

Berlese, A. 1916: 323
1916
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