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The Male of Ixodes soricis Gregson (Acarina: Ixodidae)1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

Extract

The male of Ixodes soricis Gregson was discovered at Silver Creek, British Columbia, in 1948 (Gregson, 1949). The tick was found with its hypostome fully inserted into the lateral body wall of a partially engorged female of the same species. It was not described because the specimen in situ represented an interesting example of either accidental parasitism (Anastos, 1948), or more likely an unsuccessful attempt at copulation, since it is questionable whether the males, like those of some other species of Ixodes, ever feed. The recent discovery, however, by the junior author, of another specimen, in a collection of ticks from a shrew taken at Seattle, Washington, permits the following description of the male of this species.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1952

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References

Anastos, G. 1948. Accidental parasitism of a tick by a tick. Psyche 55: 3637.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooley, R. A., and Kohls, G. M.. 1945. The genus Ixodes in North America. U.S. National Institute of Health Bull. 184; 246 pp.Google Scholar
Gregson, J. D. 1942. A new species of tick found on shrews. Canadian Ent. 73: 220228.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gregson, J. D. 1949. Unusual record of Ixodes soricis (Ixodoidea: Ixodidae). Proc. Ent. Soc. British Columbia 45: 14.Google Scholar
Jameson, E. W. Jr., 1946. The geographical range of Ixodes soricis Gregson. Canadian Ent. 78: 200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar