Published August 25, 2020 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Hirstionyssus pavlovskyi Zemskaya 1959

  • 1. Saint-Petersburg State University, 7 / 9 Universitetskaya Emb., Saint-Petersburg, Russian Federation, 199034 & Omsk State University, 28 Adrianova Str., Omsk, Russian Federation, 644077. radix. vinarski @ gmail. com. radix. vinarski @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 7644 - 4164
  • 2. Laboratory of Arthropod-Borne Viral Infections, Omsk Research Institute of Natural Foci Infections, 7 Mira Str. Omsk, Russian Federation, 644080 & Omsk State Pedagogical University, 14 Tukhachevskogo Emb., Omsk, Russian Federation, 644099

Description

Hirstionyssus pavlovskyi Zemskaya, 1959

Hirstionyssus pavlovskyii Zemskaya 1959: 486, figs 1–3.

Echinonyssus pavlovskyi — Tenorio 1984: 276.

Hirstionyssus pavlovskyi — Koroleva 1977: 138, figs 4 (5), 6 (6); Nikulina 1987: 233, 234; Goncharova et al. 1991: 75.

Type locality: Russia, Primorye region, upper courses of the Iman River.

Type series: Unknown (possibly in EMAMS). ZIN collection has two specimens (females; accession numbers 6410 and 6411) of H. pavlovskyi collected and identified by Zemskaya in 1957. The sampling site and host (Eutamias sibiricus) coincide with data provided in the original description (Zemskaya 1959). These two females may originate from the type series of H. pavlovskyi.

Type hosts: Eutamias sibiricus (Laxmann, 1769), the Siberian chipmunk, and Pteromys volans (Linnaeus, 1758).

Host range: Goncharova et al. (1991) consider Eutamias sibiricus as the principal and virtually exclusive mammal host of this mite. However, according to other authors, various species of voles (Clethrionomys, Microtus), mice, shrews, squirrels and other Micromammalia may serve as the auxiliary hosts for H. pavlovskyi (Yudin et al. 1976; Nikulina 2004).

Distribution: H. pavlovskyi is endemic to Asiatic Russia. It is distributed in Eastern Siberia and the Russian Far East, including the extreme northeast of Asia (Yudin et al. 1976; Goncharova et al. 1991; Nikulina 2004).

Notes: Hirstionyssus pavlovskyi Mrciak, 1974 is a junior homonym of H. pavlovskyi Zemskaja, 1959. Koyumdzhieva (1978) introduced Hirstionyssus nitedula as a replacement name for the former.

Notes

Published as part of Vinarski, Maxim V. & Korallo-Vinarskaya, Natalia P., 2020, An annotated catalogue of the gamasid mites associated with small mammals in Asiatic Russia. The family Hirstionyssidae (Acari: Mesostigmata: Gamasina), pp. 102-118 in Zootaxa 4838 (1) on page 110, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4838.1.5, http://zenodo.org/record/4403711

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

References

  • Zemskaya, A. A. (1959) A new species of gamasid mite, Hirstionyssus pavlovskyi sp. n., from the Primorye. Zoologicheskiy Zhurnal, 38 (3), 486 - 489. [in Russian]
  • Tenorio, J. M. (1984) Catalog of the world Echinonyssus (= Hirstionyssus) (Acari: Laelapidae). International Journal of Entomology, 26, 260 - 281.
  • Koroleva, E. V. (1977) Deutonymphs of the genus Hirstionyssus from the fauna of the USSR (Acarina, Hirstionyssidae). Parazitologiya, 11 (2), 129 - 140. [in Russian, https: // www. zin. ru / journals / parazitologiya / content / 1977 / prz _ 1977 _ 2 _ 7 _ Koroleva. pdf]
  • Nikulina, N. A. (1987) Gamasid mites (cohort Gamasina). In: Soboleva, R. G. (Ed.), Insects and Mites of the Far East of Medical and Veterinary Importance. Nauka, Leningrad, pp. 216 - 234. [in Russian].
  • Goncharova, A. A., Bondarchuk, A. S. & Vershinina, O. N. (1991) Gamasid Mites-Ectoparasites of Mammals in Transbaikalia. Chita State Medical University, Chita, 121 pp. [in Russian]
  • Yudin, B. S., Krivosheev, V. G. & Belyaev, V. G. (1976) Small Mammals of the Northern Part of Far East. Nauka, Novosibirsk, 272 pp. [in Russian]
  • Nikulina, N. A. (2004) A Catalogue of Parasitic Gamasina Mites of Mammals of Northern Eurasia (Russia). Aktsioner & Co, Saint-Petersburg, 170 pp. [in Russian]
  • Koyumdzhieva, M. (1978) On the systematics of the genus Hirstionyssus Fonseca, 1948 (Gamasina, Hirstionyssidae) with a description of a new species Hirstionyssus improvisus sp. n. from the Bulgarian mouse-like dormouse. Acta Zoologica Bulgarica, 11, 49 - 53. [in Russian]