Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-fscjk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T00:50:43.719Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

New species and new records of Argasidae from Israel. Observations on the rudimentary scutum and the respiratory system of the larvae of the Argasidae

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

O. Theodor
Affiliation:
Department of Parasitology, Hebrew University, Jerusalem
M. Costa
Affiliation:
Department of Parasitology, Hebrew University, Jerusalem

Extract

1. The dorsal plate which probably represents a rudimentary scutum in some Argasid larvae is discussed and described.

2. The respiratory system of the larvae of some species of Argas and Ornithodorus is described.

3. The systematic position of the lahorensis group of the genus Ornithodorus is discussed and the use of the name Alveonasus with an emended diagnosis for this group is suggested.

4. Ornithodorus procaviae n.sp. is described. Two other probably new species are described provisionally, but not named.

5. New records for other species of Argasidae in Israel are given.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1960

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Brumpt, E. (1936). Evolution expérimentale de Ornithodorus lahorensis. Similitude biologique des estades post-embryonnaires de ce argasiné et de ceux de l'O. megnini. Rôle pathogène eventuel. Ann. Parasit. hum. comp. 14, 632.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brumpt, E. (1949). Précis de Parasitologie (6 ed.) Paris: Masson et Cie.Google Scholar
Cooley, R. A. (1938). The genera Dermacentor and Otocentor in the United States, with studies on variation. Nat. Inst. Hlth. Bull. no. 171.Google Scholar
Cooley, R. A. & Kohls, G. M. (1944). The Argasidae of North America, Central America and Cuba. Amer. Midl. Nat. monogr. no. 1.Google Scholar
Cunliffe, N. (1914). Observations on Argas brumpti Neumann, 1907. Parasitology, 6, 379.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Delpy, L. (1938). Morphologie et disposition des stigmates respiratoires chez les larves hexapodes des Ixodides. Bull. Soc. Path. exot. 31, 298.Google Scholar
Dinnik, J. & Zumpt, F. (1949). The integumentary sense organs of the larvae of the Rhipicephalinae. Psyche, 56, 1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoogstraal, H. (1952). Notes on Egyptian ticks, I. The genus Argas in the Cairo area. Proc. Egypt. Ass. Sci. 7, 114.Google Scholar
Hoogstraal, H. (1954). Ticks and their medical relationships in the Near East. J. Egypt. publ. Hlth. Ass. 29, 1.Google Scholar
Hoogstraal, H. (1955 a). Bat ticks of the genus Argas. I. The subgenus Chiropterargas. Fieldiana Zool. 37, 579.Google Scholar
Hoogstraal, H. (1955 b). Ornithodorus delanoei Roub. & Colas Belcour, 1931, its identification and distribution, incidence and habitat in Egypt. Bull. Soc. Path. exot. 48, 734.Google Scholar
Hoogstraal, H. (1956). African Ixodoidea. I. Ticks of the Sudan. Research report, U.S. Naval Med. Res. Unit. no. 3.Google Scholar
Hoogstraal, H. (1957). Bat ticks of the genus Argas. 2. Secretargas new subgenus and A. transgariepinus White, 1846, its adult and immature stages; with a definition of the subgenus Argas. Ann. ent. Soc. Amer. 50, 544.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoogstraal, H. (1958). Bat ticks of the genus Argas. 3. The subgenus Carios, a re-description of Argas vespertilionis (Latreille, 1802) and variation within an Egyptian population. Ann. ent. Soc. Amer., 51, 19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoogstraal, H. & Kaiser, M. N. (1958). The ticks of Egypt. A brief review and keys. J. Egypt. publ. Hlth. Ass. 33, 51.Google Scholar
Lebedinsky, N. G. (1925). Die Isopotenz allgemein homologer Koerperteile des Metazoen-organismus. Abh. theoret. Biol. 22.Google Scholar
Lees, A. D. (1947). Transpiration and the structure of the epicuticle in ticks. J. exp. Biol. 23, 379.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Leeson, H. S. (1955). Further notes on the geographical distribution of Old World species of Ornithodorus. Bull. ent. Res. 46, 747.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Neumann, K. W. (1942). Die Dorsalplatten der Argasiden als Teil eines Atmungsorgans und die angeblichen Atemplatten der Ixodiden. Z. Morph. Ökol. Tiere, 38, 420.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nuttall, G. H. F., Warburton, C., Cooper, W. F. & Robinson, L. E. (1908). Ticks, a monograph of the Ixodoidea. I. Argasidae. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Nuttall, G. H. F., Cooper, W. F. & Robinson, L. E. (1908). The structure and biology of Haemaphysalis punctata Can. & Fanz. Parasitology, 1, 152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schulze, P. (1941). Eine Zecke mit ueberzaehligen Atemplatten vom Muster einer anderen Milbengruppe, der Mesostigmata. Zool. Anz. 135, 252.Google Scholar
Schulze, P. (1941 b). Das Geruchsorgan der Zecken. Z. Morph. Ökol. Tiere, 37, 491.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schulze, P. (1942). Ueber Hautsinnesorgane der Zecken, besonders über eine bisher unbekannte Art von Arthropodensinnesorganen, die Krobylophoren. Z. Morph. Ökol. Tiere, 38, 379.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schulze, P. (1949). Die wahre Natur der sog. Larvenstigmen bei den Schildzecken. Biol. Zbl. 68, 488.Google Scholar
Theiler, G. & Hoogstraal, H. (1955). The identity of Ornithodorus savPalaestmaignyi and O. pavimentosus. Neumann, 1901. J. Parasit. 41, 245.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Theodor, O. (1932). Ueber Ornithodorus coniceps Can. in Palaestina. Z. Parasitenk. 5, 69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vitzthum, H. (1931). In Kükenthal, Handbuch der Zoologie, 3, 2 (3), 36. Berlin & Leipzig: W. de Gruyter.Google Scholar