Haemaphysalis sulcata Canestrini and Fanzago, 1878

Guglielmone, Alberto A., Petney, Trevor N. & Robbins, Richard G., 2020, Ixodidae (Acari: Ixodoidea): descriptions and redescriptions of all known species from 1758 to December 31, 2019, Zootaxa 4871 (1), pp. 1-322 : 195

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4871.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C21A719F-9A6B-4227-8386-1AFA22620614

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4583697

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C04787D4-FF2B-FF00-FF07-FE7D6105CDFA

treatment provided by

Plazi (2021-01-07 12:27:21, last updated 2024-11-29 05:30:37)

scientific name

Haemaphysalis sulcata Canestrini and Fanzago, 1878
status

 

153. Haemaphysalis sulcata Canestrini and Fanzago, 1878 View in CoL .

Chiefly a Palearctic species, with a few records from the Afrotropical and Oriental Regions, whose adults are usually found on Artiodactyla : Bovidae ; larvae and nymphs are commonly recovered from Squamata (several families). All parasitic stages have been recovered from Testudines : Testudinidae (adult ticks rarely); adults and nymphs have been collected from Artiodactyla : Bovidae , and Carnivora : Canidae ; adult ticks alone have been found on Mammalia (several orders); larvae and nymphs have been recovered from Carnivora : Mustelidae , Erinaceomorpha : Erinaceidae , Lagomorpha : Leporidae and Ochotonidae , and Rodentia : Cricetidae , Muridae and Sciuridae , as well as Aves (several orders); while larvae alone have been collected from Chiroptera : Vespertilionidae , and Rodentia : Calomyscidae and Dipodidae . Haemaphysalis sulcata is a frequent parasite of humans.

M: Olenev (1928), under the name Haemaphysalis cholodkovskyi , a synonym of Haemaphysalis sulcata ; see note below

F: Larousse (1925b), under the name Haemaphysalis nicollei , another synonym of Haemaphysalis sulcata ; see note below

N: Canestrini and Fanzago (1878)

L: Pospelova-Shtrom (1935a)

Redescriptions

M: Pomerantzev (1950), Emchuk (1960), Feider (1965), Nosek and Sixl (1972), Hoogstraal et al. (1981), Teng and Jiang (1991), Filippova (1997), Yu et al. (1997), Walker A.R. et al. (2003), Estrada-Peña et al. (2004, 2017), Hosseini-Chegeni et al. (2014), Geevarghese and Mishra (2011); see note below

F: Pomerantzev (1950), Emchuk (1960), Feider (1965), Nosek and Sixl (1972), Hoogstraal et al. (1981), Teng and Jiang (1991), Filippova (1997), Yu et al. (1997), Walker A.R. et al. (2003), Estrada-Peña et al. (2004, 2017), Geevarghese and Mishra (2011); see note below

N: Pospelova-Shtrom (1940), Emchuk (1960), Feider (1965), Nosek and Sixl (1972), Hoogstraal et al. (1981), Filippova (1997), Geevarghese and Mishra (2011), Estrada-Peña et al. (2017); see note below

L: Pospelova-Shtrom (1940), Emchuk (1960), Feider (1965), Nosek and Sixl (1972), Hoogstraal et al. (1981), Filippova (1997), Geevarghese and Mishra (2011), Estrada-Peña et al. (2017); see note below

Note: Hoogstraal and McCarthy (1965) state that Haemaphysalis sulcata was considered an invalid name until it was reinstated by Pospelova-Shtrom (1935a). Nevertheless, Haemaphysalis sulcata appears difficult to identify with certainty. Thus, Olenev (1928) described Haemaphysalis cholodkovskyi and redescribed it in Olenev (1931a), although it is a synonym of Haemaphysalis sulcata , as explained in Filippova (1997). In the same papers Olenev redescribed Haemaphysalis sulcata but, according to Filippova (1997), confused this species with Haemaphysalis parva . Filippova (1997) redescribed the male, female, nymph and larva of Haemaphysalis sulcata and presented information concerning intraspecific morphological variation; however, there are profound differences in the external morphology of this species as depicted by different authors. The above descriptions and redescriptions may include more than one species under the same name; therefore, significant uncertainties exist concerning the correct definition of Haemaphysalis sulcata .

Canestrini, G. & Fanzago, F. (1878) Intorno agli acari italiani. Atti del Reale Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti, Serie 5, 4, 69 - 208.

Emchuk, L. E. (1960) External and internal structure, ecology, taxonomy, distribution and noxious effects of ticks. Fauna Ukrayiny. Academy of Sciences of Ukrainian SSR, Kiev, 163 pp. [in Russian]

Estrada-Pena, A., Bouaottour, A., Camicas, J. & Walker, A. (2004) Ticks of domestic animals in the Mediterranean region: a guide to identification of species. University of Zaragoza, Zaragoza, 137 pp.

Estrada-Pena, A., Mihalca, A. D. & Petney, T. N. (2017) Ticks of Europe and North Africa. Springer, Cham, 404 pp. https: // doi. org / 10.1007 / 978 - 3 - 319 - 63760 - 0

Feider, Z. (1965) Fauna Republicii Populare Romane Arachnida Acaromorpha Suprafamilia Ixodoidea (Capuse). Vol. 5. Issue 2. Editura Academiei Republicii Populare Romane, Bucarest, 401 pp.

Filippova, N. A. (1997) Ixodid ticks of the subfamily Amblyomminae. In: Fauna of Russia and neighbouring countries, 4 (5) Nauka, St. Petersburg, 436 pp. [in Russian]

Geevarghese, G. & Mishra, A. C. (2011) Haemaphysalis ticks of India. Elsevier, Amsterdam, 260 pp.

Hoogstraal, H. & McCarthy, V. C. (1965) Hosts and distribution of Haemaphysalis kashmirensis with descriptions of immature stages and definition of the subgenus Herpetobia Canestrini (resurrected). Journal of Parasitology, 51, 674 - 679. https: // doi. org / 10.2307 / 3276257

Hosseini-Chegeni, A., Telmadarraiy, Z., Salimi, M., Arzamani, K. & Banafshi, O. (2014) A record of Haemaphysalis erinacei (Acari: Ixodidae) collected from hedgehog and an identification key for the species of Haemaphysalis occurring in Iran. Persian Journal of Acarology, 3, 203 - 215.

Nosek, J. & Sixl, W (1972) Central-European ticks (Ixodoidea). Mittellungen der Abteilung fur Zoologie am Landesmuseum Joanneum, 1, 61 - 92.

Olenev, N. O. (1928) On the taxonomy and geographical distribution of ticks (Ixodoidea): II. Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR, Series A, 2, 29 - 34. [in Russian]

Olenev, N. O. (1931 a) Parasitic ticks (Ixodoidea) of USSR. Opredeliteli po Faune SSSR, Izdavaemye Zoologischeskim Muzeem Akademii Nauk, 4, 1 - 125. [in Russian]

Pomerantzev, B. I. (1950) Ixodid ticks (Ixodidae). In: Fauna SSSR, Paukoobraznye, 4 (2), 1 - 224. [in Russian]

Pospelova-Shtrom, M. V. (1935 a) De la nomenclature des trois especes de tiques du genre Haemaphysalis. Parazitologicheskii Sbornik, 3, 247 - 248.

Pospelova-Shtrom, M. V. (1940) Larvae and nymphs of ticks of the genus Haemaphysalis Koch of the fauna of the USSR. Parazitologicheskii Sbornik, 7, 71 - 99. [in Russian]

Teng, K. F. & Jiang, Z. J (1991) Economic insect fauna of China. Fascicule 39, Acari: Ixodidae. Science Press, Beijing, 355 pp. [in Chinese]

Yu, X., Ye, R. & Dong, Z. (1997) The tick fauna of Xinjiang. Xinjiang Scientific, Technological and Medical Publishing House, Urumqi, 169 pp. [in Chinese]

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Ixodida

Family

Ixodidae

Genus

Haemaphysalis