Philopteridae

Martin, Storm Blas, Keatley, Sarah, Wallace, Alisa, Vaughan-Higgins, Rebecca J. & Ash, Amanda, 2024, A critically co-endangered feather louse Forficuloecus pezopori n. sp. (Phthiraptera: Philopteridae) detected through conservation intervention for the western ground parrot Pezoporus flaviventris (Psittaculidae), International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife 24 (100931), pp. 100931-100931 : 100931-

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.ijppaw.2024.100931

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D31F87FF-F365-FFEA-FCB5-F8D57E52D89A

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Philopteridae
status

 

4.1. Richness of Philopteridae View in CoL from Australian parrots

Forficuloecus pezopori is the eleventh species proposed for its genus, the only louse yet known from a ground parrot (i.e., Pezoporus spp. ), and the only metazoan parasite known from P. flaviventris . Indeed, F. pezopori is the first metazoan parasite reported from any of Australia’ s six endangered parrot species. Including P. flaviventris , there are 43 extant

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and one historically extinct species of Australian parrot ( Psittaculidae ), all except one of which are, or have local subspecies which are endemic (BirdLife Australia, 2022). Parasites remain unknown from many of these parrots; substantial richness clearly remains to be discovered.

Species of Forficuloecus are known only from Australasian parrots ( Psittaculidae ) and appear to have moderate to high host-specificity. Seven of the 11 species, including F. pezopori , are known only from a single host species, two are known from multiple congeneric hosts, and two are known from hosts spanning two genera ( Price et al., 2008). No parrot species is yet known to host more than one species of Forficuloecus , however, Bourke’ s parrot Neopsephotus bourkii (Gould, 1841) is host to F. josephi as well as another philopterid Neopsittaconirmus vincesmithi Price & Johnson, 2007 , and the bluebonnet Northiella haematogaster (Gould, 1838) is likewise host to two philopterids but no known species of Forficuloecus ( Price et al., 2008; Price and Johnson, 2007). Eight of the eleven species of Forficuloecus are known from Australia, two only from New Zealand, and one only from New Guinea ( Price et al., 2008).

4.2. Host-specificity of Forficuloecus pezopori

We presume F. pezopori is specific to P. flaviventris (western ground parrot). Until recently, P. flaviventris has been considered a subspecies of P. wallicus (eastern ground parrot). Regardless of whether the western ground parrot is recognised as a distinct species, they are substantially separated geographically from the eastern ground parrot and genetic analyses suggest the two diverged prior to the Pleistocene ( Joseph et al., 2011; Murphy et al., 2011). It is therefore plausible that western and eastern ground parrots support distinct parasite fauna. A feather mite Dubininia pezopori Mironov, Ehrnsberger & Dabert, 2017 ( Sarcoptiformes : Xolalgidae ), is known from, and only from, the Tasmanian subspecies of the eastern ground parrot P. wallicus leachi Matthews, 1912 ( Mironov et al., 2017). As far as we are aware, no metazoan parasites have been reported from the mainland eastern ground parrot P. wallicus wallicus (Kerr, 1972) , nor from the only other ground parrot, the night parrot P. occidentalis (Gould, 1861) ; there is no indication that any species of Pezoporus has been substantially investigated for parasites.

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Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Psocodea

Family

Philopteridae

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