Hymenoptera
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.24349/sy16-8iqn |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B2BD63-FFCB-FF8A-8C99-17B4FB72AAF7 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Hymenoptera |
status |
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Hymenoptera View in CoL View at ENA : Bees (Annex IV)
Scutacaridae don′t play an important role as associates of the honey bee Apis mellifera
(family Apidae ). Still, the third scutacarid species after Imparipes apicola (Banks, 1914) and
Scutacarus acarorum (Goeze, 1780) (Baumann 2018) was now encountered as inquiline of
A. mellifera by Abd El Hady and Mahfouz (2021). They found Scutacarus evansi Momen &
Curry, 1987 in bee hives in Egypt, albeit only in low abundance.
In different Bombus species (also family Apidae ), Scutacarus acarorum can be found
as a frequent associate. This mite species generally prefers hibernated queens as phoresy
host (Baumann 2018). It has now also been found associated with Bombus bellicosus and B.
pauloensis in Uruguay ( Revainera et al. 2019), and although authors state that the associated
acarofauna in general preferred queens as host, the prevalence of S. acarorum was highest in
males of both Bombus species in the respective study. Another species, Imparipes (I.) rafalskii
Dastych, 1978, was newly found associated with B. terrestris and also with the genus Andrena
of the family Andrenidae ( Sobhi et al. 2017a) . This scutacarid was until now only known
phoretic on the apid Dasypoda plumipes (Baumann 2018) .
Nazari et al. (2019) found an Imparipes species phoretic on either the genus Andrena
( Andrenidae ) or on Antophora ( Apidae ); the real host is unclear because the text and table 2 of
the respective publication are inconsistent with one another. If the host in fact Antophora is,
this would be the first report of this genus as host for Scutacaridae .
Until now, only two species of the scutacarid genus Nasutiscutacarus were known, N.
ampliatus Beer & Cross, 1960 and N. anthrenae Beer &Cross, 1960 , both of which are phoretic
on bees of the soil nesting family Halictidae (Baumann 2018) . This number was now doubled
by Khaustov and OConnor (2019), who described two new scutacarids associated with halictid
bees: N. latisetus Khaustov & OConnor, 2019 from Sri Lanka and N. longicaudus Khaustov &
OConnor, 2019 from Papua New Guinea. Nasutiscutacarus is characterized by an elongated
gnathosoma which implies a highly specific, albeit still unknown, feeding source ( Khaustov and
OConnor 2019). Since all known species of Nasutiscutacarus are associated with Halictidae ,
the elongated gnathosoma most likely is an adaptation to special conditions in the hosts’ nests.
However, other scutacarid genera possessing typical scutacarid gnathosomata can also be
encountered in association with Halictidae (Baumann 2018) , which indicates that it must be a
unique niche within halictid nests that is exploited by Nasutiscutacarus .
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