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Cohort Nothrina (Supercohort Desmonomatides (Desmonomata))
Superorder Acariformes
Order Sarcoptiformes
Suborder Oribatida
Supercohort Desmonomatides (= Desmonomata, Holosomatina, Nothronota)
Cohort: Nothrina (Crotonioidea, Malaconothroidea, Nanhermannioidea,
Hermannioidea);
[Also Cohorts Brachypylina (=Euoribatida) (24 superfamilies); Astigmatina (=Astigmata, Acaridida)]
Common names: nothroid oribatid mites
Probability of Encounter: low
Quarantine importance: Members of the Cohort Nothrina are not of great quarantine importance. Some species are aquatic or subaquatic and may be found in aquaria, sphagnum, and similar products. Others are common in wet forest litter, mosses, and in lichens and other epiphytes on trees and shrubs.
Diagnosis. Black, brown, reddish, beige, yellowish to pale holoid oribatid mites with the capitulum withdrawn within a camerostome. Ventral plate sometimes incised (Nanhermanniidae); discrete aggenital and adanal plates sometimes present; 3 pairs of genital papillae. Palps with 2-5 free segments. Opisthosomal glands present. Prodorsal trichobothria lost in some aquatic forms.
Similar
mites. see Mixonomatides.
Ecology
& Distribution. Nothrids, nanhermanniids, and
some camisiids (Platynothrus) are characteristic of fairly mesic to wet
forest litter, mosses, and bogs. Other
camisiids (Camisia) and crotonioids are more characteristic of dry
litter, bark and other arboreal habitats.
Tryhypochthoniids can be found in dry (Tryhypochthonius, Archegozetes)
or wet litter, and in fully aquatic habitats (Mucronothrus). Malaconothrids tend to be found in wet
litter, moss and streams. Except in the
Crotoniidae and Hermanniidae, most desmonomates are all female parthenogens. Hermanniids should probably be considered
early derivative Brachypylina.
References
Colloff M. 1993. A taxonomic revision of the oribatid mite
genus Camisia (Acari: Oribatida).
Journal of Natural History 27: 1325-1408.
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).
Lee DC. 1982.
Sarcoptiformes (Acari) of South Australian soils. 3. Arthronotina
(Cryptostigmata). Records of the South Australian Museum 18: 327-359.
Luxton M. 1985.
Cryptostigmata (Arachnida: Acari) – a concise review. Fauna of New
Zealand 7: 1-106.
Luxton M. 1987.
New mites of the family Crotoniidae (Acari : Cryptostigmata) from
northern Queensland. Acarologia 28: 381-388.