Ixodida (Metastigmata)
Superorder Parasitiformes
Order Ixodida
Families:
Ixodidae, Argasidae, Nuttalliellidae
Common names: hard ticks, soft ticks
Probability of Encounter: medium
Quarantine importance: Very high. Ticks are the most important group of disease vectors after the mosquitoes.
Diagnosis. Large parasitiform mites (to 6 mm unfed, 3 cm when engorged) with
slicing mouthparts and a denticulate hypostome produced anteriorly. Integument leathery to papillate, dorsum with
or without a prodorsal scutum (covering most of dorsum in males) and with or
without one pair of ocelli. Stigmatal
openings on sieve plates behind coxae IV or lateral to coxae III-IV. Palps 3-4 segmented without
apotele.
Similar
taxa. Macronyssidae (Mesostigmata)
are superficially tick-like mites that feed on the blood of reptiles (Ophionyssus),
birds and mammals (Ornithonyssus), but unlike ticks, have a well
developed tritosternum, palp apotele, etc.
Ecology
& Distribution. Obligate blood-sucking
parasites of vertebrates. Living in nests, in soil, on vegetation, and on
animals. Nuttalliellidae is poorly
known and restricted to southern Africa; the other two families occur
worldwide. The paralysis tick (Ixodes
holocyclus) is a common ixodid tick in eastern Australia.
References
Johnston, D.E. 1982.
Acari. In: Parker, S.P.
(ed.) Synopsis and classification of
living organisms. McGraw-Hill, New
York, p. 111.
Klompen, J.S.H. and Oliver
Jr., J.H. 1993. Haller’s organs in the tick family Argasidae
(Acari: Parasitiformes: Ixodida). J. Parasitol. 79: 591-603.
Krantz GW. 1978.
A Manual of Acarology.
OSU Bookstores: Corvallis.
Roberts
FHS. 1970. Australian Ticks.
CSIRO: Melbourne.
Sonenshine
DE. 1991. The Biology of Ticks.
Oxford University Press: Oxford.