Phytoptus hirtae Roivainen 1950

Phytoptus hirtae Roivainen 1950 (Fig. 5) Roivainen 1950: 13,14 Fig. 9 non Skoracka et al. 2004: 7, 8; no fig. Petanović et al. 2007: 110; no fig. Protogyne female. Body vermiform, whitish, 393 long, 67 wide. Prodorsal shield semicircular with five distinct lines (median, two admedians and...

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Main Author: Chetverikov, Philipp E.
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Published: Zenodo 2011
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6183876
https://zenodo.org/record/6183876
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6183876
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collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
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language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Arachnida
Prostigmata
Phytoptidae
Phytoptus
Phytoptus hirtae
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Arachnida
Prostigmata
Phytoptidae
Phytoptus
Phytoptus hirtae
Chetverikov, Philipp E.
Phytoptus hirtae Roivainen 1950
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Arachnida
Prostigmata
Phytoptidae
Phytoptus
Phytoptus hirtae
description Phytoptus hirtae Roivainen 1950 (Fig. 5) Roivainen 1950: 13,14 Fig. 9 non Skoracka et al. 2004: 7, 8; no fig. Petanovi&cacute; et al. 2007: 110; no fig. Protogyne female. Body vermiform, whitish, 393 long, 67 wide. Prodorsal shield semicircular with five distinct lines (median, two admedians and two submedians-I) extending from rear to anterior shield margin. Median line with a gap in anterior one fourth. Admedian lines are parallel to median line in anterior third of shield; diverging in rear two thirds of shield, forming a figure resembling an inverted Greek letter “ψ”. Two short lines present between median and admedian lines near rear shield margin. Submedian-I lines straight in anterior half of shield and sinuate in rear half. Two short lines present between admedian and submedian-I lines in anterior third of shield. Submedian-II lines from anterior shield margin running back past inner side of tubercules of ve and ending well in front of tubercules of sc . These lines may consist of 2 to 3 fragments or may be entire with a small curve at rear. Two to three short lines present on lateral sides of shield. Surface of prodorsal shield before ve with small granulations. Prodorsal shield 37 long; ve 13 long, directed forward, tubercles 28 apart; sc 3 long, directed backward, tubercles 23 apart. Distance between tubercules ve and sc 22. Gnathosoma 26 long. Leg I 37 long, tibia 8, l' 3, tibial solenidion 9, tarsus 7, ω 11 long, without knob, empodium 7 / 6 -rayed. Leg II 33 long, tibia 7, l' absent, tarsus 6 long, ω 11 long, without knob, empodium 7 / 6 - rayed. Setae bv present. Short longitudinal line present near tubercule of bv on both femora. Coxae with numerous oval microtibercules. Suboral plate absent. Setae 1 b 19 long, 19 apart; 1a 23 long, 15 apart; 2a 56 long, 36 apart. Epigynium smooth, 12 long, 22 wide; 3a 13 long. Opisthosoma with 87 microtuberculated annuli. 3 annuli present before epigynium. Setal lengths: c 1 108, c 2 44, d 26, e 9, f 51, h 1 5; 9 annuli between rear shield margin and tubercules of c 1 , 7 annuli anterior to c 2 17 annuli situated between c 2 and d 29 annuli situated between d and e 24 annuli situated between e and f , 10 annuli situated between f and h 1 . Male . In comparison to females, males are smaller in size with shorter legs and opisthosomal setae and possess a 6 / 5 -rayed empodium. The design of the male prodorsal shield is similar to that of the female. Measurements of males are given in Table 4. Material examined. 10 protogyne females and 5 males (slide # 28 -09) from Carex hirta L. (Cyperaceae) [inside leaf sheaths; no damage was observed] RUSSIA: Pskov Prov., Loknya area, vill. Gogolevo, meadow near pine-tree forest; 57 °00' 22 '' N, 30 ° 56 ' 36 '' E, 14 July 2009, coll. P. E. Chetverikov. Additional material. 22 protogyne females, 7 males and 8 nymphs (slides # 26 -09, # 27 -09), same host, date, locality and coll. as before; 29 deutogyne females, 2 protogyne female, 1 overwintering male and 12 nymphs (slides # 29 - 10, # 30 - 10, # 31 - 10) same host, date, locality and coll.; 6 protogyne females and 3 nymphs (slides # 27 - 0 4, # 28 -04), same host and coll., RUSSIA: Smolensk Prov., Demidov area, vil. Kobysi, 55 ° 26 '01'' N, 31 ° 22 ' 74 '' E, 10 July 2004; 5 protogyne females and 3 nymphs (slides # 44 b-04), same host and coll., RUSSIA: Pskov Prov., Nevel area, vil. Turichino, 55 ° 85 ' 70 '' N, 29 ° 57 '03'' E, 16 July 2004; 28 females and 3 nymphs (slides # 22 -02, # 23 - 0 2, # 24 -02), same host and coll., RUSSIA: Leningrad Prov., Gatchina area, Marienburg, 59 ° 57 ' 57 '' N, 30 °08' 54 '' E, 0 8 October 2002; 12 females and 2 nymphs (slide # 92 -03), same host, locality and coll., 21 September 2003; 24 protogyne females and 7 nymphs (slides # 108 -02, # 112 -02), same host and coll., UKRAINE: Dnepropetrovsk, on bank of Lake Moskovskoye, 48 ° 51 ' 38 '' N, 34 ° 97 ' 47 '' E, 12 August 2002; 7 protogyne females, 1 male and 2 nymphs (slides # 56 -04, # 57 -04, # 58 -04, # 59 -04), same host, locality and coll., 11 August 2008; 1 protogyne female (slide # 1093 / 7), same host, SERBIA: Belgrade, near Ostru&zcaron;ni&ccaron;ki most, 0 8 May 2007, coll. D. Smiljani&cdot;. Character Mite species Mite species P. hirtae P. dehesae P. liroi * see remarks for Table 5 Differential diagnosis. P. hirtae is close to Phytoptus dehesae Roivainen 1953, P. l i ro i Roivainen, 1947 and P . atherodes sp.n. P. hirtae , P. dehesae and P. l i ro i differ in the length of the sc , body measurements, number of dorsal annuli and length of the median line (Table 7). The differences between P. hirtae and P. atherodes are mentioned above in the differential diagnosis of P. atherodes . Distribution and host plants. Specimens of P. h i r t a e were found inside leaf sheaths of Carex hirta L. 1753, in Sweden and Serbia (Roivainen 1950; Petanovi&cdot; et al. 2007). Since 2002, I repeatedly found P. h i r t a e on the same host in Northwest Russia and the Ukraine (Fig. 3) where this mite species is quite common. The host plant for this mite species is also found in Northern Africa, Iran and Turkey (Egorova, 1999), so future surveys may reveal a wider distribution for P. hirtae . Remarks . According to Skoracka et. al. (2004), P. h i r t a e also lives on Carex arenaria L. and Carex colchica subsp. ligerica (J. Gay) Egor., 1973 in Poland. On the same host-plants in Sweden about 60 years ago, Roivainen (1950) found Phytoptus liroi Roivainen 1947. Since 2002 in the Ukraine and European part of Russia, I have regularly collected mites of the genus Phytoptus from C. arenaria and C. colchica . Morphologically, these specimens were much closer to P. l i ro i than to P. hirtae . Sedges C. arenaria , C. colchica and C. hirta belong to different subgenera of the genus Carex (the first two species belong to subgenus Vignea whereas the third belongs to the subgenus Carex ) and phylogenetically are rather remote from each other (Egorova 1999). In Russia and Ukraine, I found P. h i r t a e only on C. hirta. Therefore, I suggest that Skoracka et al. (2004) probably collected a different species of Phytoptus (probably P. l i ro i ) in Poland on C. arenaria and C. colchica . Deuterogeny of Phytoptus hirtae . Protogyne and deutogyne females of P. h i r t a e (10 of each from samples # 9 & # 10; Table 2) collected in the same meadow near the village of Gogolevo, Russia, were measured and compared to reveal the existence of deuterogeny. Generally, summer and overwintered females are identical except for differences in the length of setae: overwintered females have longer setae ve, e, f and shorter coxal setae 1 b (Table 4). Moreover, in comparison to uncoloured, whitish summer females, overwintering females are yellowish. Variability of the empodial ray number of P. h i r ta e . I counted the number of rays on the inner and outer margins of the empodia on legs I and II of 81 females (from samples # 8, # 9 and # 10; Table 2). The frequency of different variants of empodial numbers were calculated and plotted (Fig. 6). I have concluded that: 1) in the same sample, mites have different numbers of empodial rays (5 / 6, 6 / 5, 6 / 6, 7 / 5, 7 / 6, 7 / 7, 8 / 7); 2) one and the same mite may have different empodia which differ in the number of rays. For example, 6 / 5-6 / 6 - 6 / 5 - 5 / 5; 3) 7 / 6 -rayed empodia are the most common form; 4) the frequency of 7 / 6 -rayed empodia is constantly high: 85 to 87 % among summer females and 79 % among overwintered females; 5) the frequency of 5 / 6 -, 7 / 5 - and 8 / 6 -rayed empodia is constantly low (1-2 %); 6) 6 / 5 - and 6 / 6 -rayed empodia are rather rare among summer females (<4 %) whereas among overwintered females, such variations of the empodia can be twice or thrice the number (9 % and 6 %, respectively). I consider 5 / 6 -, 6 / 5 -, 6 / 6 -, 7 / 5 - and 8 / 6 -rayed empodia to be aberrant forms. So, females of P. hirtae do not demonstrate such a distinct seasonal variability in the number of empodial rays as do females of P. atherodes . But in comparison with summer females, two tendencies are peculiar for the overwintered females of P. hirtae : a slight decrease in the frequency of the most common variant of the empodium (7 / 6) and an increased frequency of the aberrant forms of empodia with reduced numbers of rays (6 / 5 and 6 / 6). See Fig. 6. Intraspecific and interspecific morphological variability of P. atherodes and P. h i r ta e . These two mite species are very similar morphologically, moreover though, P. hirtae from geographically isolated populations differs slightly in some characters but most measurements overlap (Table 5). Principal component analysis (PCA) of the samples # 1, # 6, # 7, # 8 and # 9 (Table 2) was carried out to compare morphological variability of protogyne females of P . hirtae and P. atherodes by a complex of characters. Two main Factors I & II (Jolliffe 2002, StatSoft, Inc. 2011), representing together about 90 % of total morphological dispersion, were revealed (Fig. 7). Samples ## 2 to 5 which included many deutogynes were not analysed to avoid the accidental confusion between deutogynes and protogynes. Characters weakly correlated (r≤0.5) with Factors I and II were excluded from analysis. As a result, a complex of 6 characters was formed based on the number of empodial rays, length of ve , c 2 , d , sc and distance between tubercules of ve . The first 4 characters had a high correlation with factor I (r≥0.9) and the other two were highly correlated with factor II (r≥0.8). Graphically, the samples belonging to different species were distinctly separated by factor I (Fig. 7) which reflects interspecific variability. This fact may be a supplemental argument to the validity of the separation of the species P. hirtae and P. atherodes . Samples including P. h i r t a e differed by meaning of Factor II (Fig. 7). So that Factor II, reflects the intraspecific variability (variability between different populations) of this mite species. : Published as part of Chetverikov, Philipp E., 2011, Phytoptus atherodes sp. n. (Acari: Eriophyoidea: Phytoptidae) and a supplementary description of Phytoptus hirtae Roivainen 1950 from sedges (Cyperaceae), pp. 26-44 in Zootaxa 3045 on pages 35-40, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.200512 : {"references": ["Roivainen, H. (1950) Eriophyid news from Sweden. Acta Entomologica Fennica, 7, 1 - 51.", "Skoracka, A., Macuk, L. & Rakowski, W. (2004) New eriophyoid mites (Acari: Eriohyoidea) from sedges in Poland and supplement description of Eriophyes lentiginosus Mitrofanov, Sharonov et Sekerskaja, 1983. Zootaxa, 446, 1 - 15.", "Petanovic, R., Chetverikov, P. E. & Smiljani, D. (2007) Eriophyoid mites (Acari: Eriophyoidea) from sedges (Carex spp., Cyperaceae) in Serbia. Acta Entomologica Serbica, 12 (2), 107 - 113.", "Roivainen, H. (1953) Some gall mites (Eriophyidae) from Spain. Publicado en los Archivos del Instituto de Aclimatacion, 3, 9 - 43.", "Roivainen, H. (1947) Eriophyid news from Finland. Acta Entomologica Fennica, 3, 1 - 51.", "Egorova, T. V. (1999) Osoki (Carex L.) Rossii i Sopredelnyh Gosudarstv [The Sedges (Carex L.) of Russia and Adjacent States]. A. L. Takhtajan (Ed.). St. Petersburg Chemical-Pharmaceutical Academy, St. Petersburg, 772 pp. [Bilingual: Russian & English]", "Jolliffe, I. T. (2002) Principal Component Analysis. Second edition. Springer Series in Statistics. New York: Springer-Verlag New York, Inc., 487 pp., ISBN 978 - 0 - 387 - 95442 - 2", "StatSoft, Inc. (2011). Electronic Statistics Textbook. Tulsa, OK: StatSoft. WEB: http: // www. statsoft. com / textbook / 18 August 2011"]}
format Text
author Chetverikov, Philipp E.
author_facet Chetverikov, Philipp E.
author_sort Chetverikov, Philipp E.
title Phytoptus hirtae Roivainen 1950
title_short Phytoptus hirtae Roivainen 1950
title_full Phytoptus hirtae Roivainen 1950
title_fullStr Phytoptus hirtae Roivainen 1950
title_full_unstemmed Phytoptus hirtae Roivainen 1950
title_sort phytoptus hirtae roivainen 1950
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2011
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6183876
https://zenodo.org/record/6183876
genre Northwest Russia
Mite
genre_facet Northwest Russia
Mite
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6183876 2023-05-15T17:46:08+02:00 Phytoptus hirtae Roivainen 1950 Chetverikov, Philipp E. 2011 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6183876 https://zenodo.org/record/6183876 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/002AE1084F238249FFE4FF87FF87FF95 http://table.plazi.org/id/20C578EE4F2B8241FF73FF1DFABEFF3A http://table.plazi.org/id/20C578EE4F288242FF73FB45FC3DFB4D http://table.plazi.org/id/20C578EE4F21824BFF73FF1FFBEBFF3B https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.200512 http://publication.plazi.org/id/002AE1084F238249FFE4FF87FF87FF95 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.200517 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.200515 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.200518 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.200519 http://table.plazi.org/id/20C578EE4F2B8241FF73FF1DFABEFF3A http://table.plazi.org/id/20C578EE4F288242FF73FB45FC3DFB4D http://table.plazi.org/id/20C578EE4F21824BFF73FF1FFBEBFF3B https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6183877 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Arachnida Prostigmata Phytoptidae Phytoptus Phytoptus hirtae article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2011 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6183876 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.200512 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.200517 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.200515 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.200518 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.200519 https://doi.or 2022-04-01T11:26:21Z Phytoptus hirtae Roivainen 1950 (Fig. 5) Roivainen 1950: 13,14 Fig. 9 non Skoracka et al. 2004: 7, 8; no fig. Petanovi&cacute; et al. 2007: 110; no fig. Protogyne female. Body vermiform, whitish, 393 long, 67 wide. Prodorsal shield semicircular with five distinct lines (median, two admedians and two submedians-I) extending from rear to anterior shield margin. Median line with a gap in anterior one fourth. Admedian lines are parallel to median line in anterior third of shield; diverging in rear two thirds of shield, forming a figure resembling an inverted Greek letter “ψ”. Two short lines present between median and admedian lines near rear shield margin. Submedian-I lines straight in anterior half of shield and sinuate in rear half. Two short lines present between admedian and submedian-I lines in anterior third of shield. Submedian-II lines from anterior shield margin running back past inner side of tubercules of ve and ending well in front of tubercules of sc . These lines may consist of 2 to 3 fragments or may be entire with a small curve at rear. Two to three short lines present on lateral sides of shield. Surface of prodorsal shield before ve with small granulations. Prodorsal shield 37 long; ve 13 long, directed forward, tubercles 28 apart; sc 3 long, directed backward, tubercles 23 apart. Distance between tubercules ve and sc 22. Gnathosoma 26 long. Leg I 37 long, tibia 8, l' 3, tibial solenidion 9, tarsus 7, ω 11 long, without knob, empodium 7 / 6 -rayed. Leg II 33 long, tibia 7, l' absent, tarsus 6 long, ω 11 long, without knob, empodium 7 / 6 - rayed. Setae bv present. Short longitudinal line present near tubercule of bv on both femora. Coxae with numerous oval microtibercules. Suboral plate absent. Setae 1 b 19 long, 19 apart; 1a 23 long, 15 apart; 2a 56 long, 36 apart. Epigynium smooth, 12 long, 22 wide; 3a 13 long. Opisthosoma with 87 microtuberculated annuli. 3 annuli present before epigynium. Setal lengths: c 1 108, c 2 44, d 26, e 9, f 51, h 1 5; 9 annuli between rear shield margin and tubercules of c 1 , 7 annuli anterior to c 2 17 annuli situated between c 2 and d 29 annuli situated between d and e 24 annuli situated between e and f , 10 annuli situated between f and h 1 . Male . In comparison to females, males are smaller in size with shorter legs and opisthosomal setae and possess a 6 / 5 -rayed empodium. The design of the male prodorsal shield is similar to that of the female. Measurements of males are given in Table 4. Material examined. 10 protogyne females and 5 males (slide # 28 -09) from Carex hirta L. (Cyperaceae) [inside leaf sheaths; no damage was observed] RUSSIA: Pskov Prov., Loknya area, vill. Gogolevo, meadow near pine-tree forest; 57 °00' 22 '' N, 30 ° 56 ' 36 '' E, 14 July 2009, coll. P. E. Chetverikov. Additional material. 22 protogyne females, 7 males and 8 nymphs (slides # 26 -09, # 27 -09), same host, date, locality and coll. as before; 29 deutogyne females, 2 protogyne female, 1 overwintering male and 12 nymphs (slides # 29 - 10, # 30 - 10, # 31 - 10) same host, date, locality and coll.; 6 protogyne females and 3 nymphs (slides # 27 - 0 4, # 28 -04), same host and coll., RUSSIA: Smolensk Prov., Demidov area, vil. Kobysi, 55 ° 26 '01'' N, 31 ° 22 ' 74 '' E, 10 July 2004; 5 protogyne females and 3 nymphs (slides # 44 b-04), same host and coll., RUSSIA: Pskov Prov., Nevel area, vil. Turichino, 55 ° 85 ' 70 '' N, 29 ° 57 '03'' E, 16 July 2004; 28 females and 3 nymphs (slides # 22 -02, # 23 - 0 2, # 24 -02), same host and coll., RUSSIA: Leningrad Prov., Gatchina area, Marienburg, 59 ° 57 ' 57 '' N, 30 °08' 54 '' E, 0 8 October 2002; 12 females and 2 nymphs (slide # 92 -03), same host, locality and coll., 21 September 2003; 24 protogyne females and 7 nymphs (slides # 108 -02, # 112 -02), same host and coll., UKRAINE: Dnepropetrovsk, on bank of Lake Moskovskoye, 48 ° 51 ' 38 '' N, 34 ° 97 ' 47 '' E, 12 August 2002; 7 protogyne females, 1 male and 2 nymphs (slides # 56 -04, # 57 -04, # 58 -04, # 59 -04), same host, locality and coll., 11 August 2008; 1 protogyne female (slide # 1093 / 7), same host, SERBIA: Belgrade, near Ostru&zcaron;ni&ccaron;ki most, 0 8 May 2007, coll. D. Smiljani&cdot;. Character Mite species Mite species P. hirtae P. dehesae P. liroi * see remarks for Table 5 Differential diagnosis. P. hirtae is close to Phytoptus dehesae Roivainen 1953, P. l i ro i Roivainen, 1947 and P . atherodes sp.n. P. hirtae , P. dehesae and P. l i ro i differ in the length of the sc , body measurements, number of dorsal annuli and length of the median line (Table 7). The differences between P. hirtae and P. atherodes are mentioned above in the differential diagnosis of P. atherodes . Distribution and host plants. Specimens of P. h i r t a e were found inside leaf sheaths of Carex hirta L. 1753, in Sweden and Serbia (Roivainen 1950; Petanovi&cdot; et al. 2007). Since 2002, I repeatedly found P. h i r t a e on the same host in Northwest Russia and the Ukraine (Fig. 3) where this mite species is quite common. The host plant for this mite species is also found in Northern Africa, Iran and Turkey (Egorova, 1999), so future surveys may reveal a wider distribution for P. hirtae . Remarks . According to Skoracka et. al. (2004), P. h i r t a e also lives on Carex arenaria L. and Carex colchica subsp. ligerica (J. Gay) Egor., 1973 in Poland. On the same host-plants in Sweden about 60 years ago, Roivainen (1950) found Phytoptus liroi Roivainen 1947. Since 2002 in the Ukraine and European part of Russia, I have regularly collected mites of the genus Phytoptus from C. arenaria and C. colchica . Morphologically, these specimens were much closer to P. l i ro i than to P. hirtae . Sedges C. arenaria , C. colchica and C. hirta belong to different subgenera of the genus Carex (the first two species belong to subgenus Vignea whereas the third belongs to the subgenus Carex ) and phylogenetically are rather remote from each other (Egorova 1999). In Russia and Ukraine, I found P. h i r t a e only on C. hirta. Therefore, I suggest that Skoracka et al. (2004) probably collected a different species of Phytoptus (probably P. l i ro i ) in Poland on C. arenaria and C. colchica . Deuterogeny of Phytoptus hirtae . Protogyne and deutogyne females of P. h i r t a e (10 of each from samples # 9 & # 10; Table 2) collected in the same meadow near the village of Gogolevo, Russia, were measured and compared to reveal the existence of deuterogeny. Generally, summer and overwintered females are identical except for differences in the length of setae: overwintered females have longer setae ve, e, f and shorter coxal setae 1 b (Table 4). Moreover, in comparison to uncoloured, whitish summer females, overwintering females are yellowish. Variability of the empodial ray number of P. h i r ta e . I counted the number of rays on the inner and outer margins of the empodia on legs I and II of 81 females (from samples # 8, # 9 and # 10; Table 2). The frequency of different variants of empodial numbers were calculated and plotted (Fig. 6). I have concluded that: 1) in the same sample, mites have different numbers of empodial rays (5 / 6, 6 / 5, 6 / 6, 7 / 5, 7 / 6, 7 / 7, 8 / 7); 2) one and the same mite may have different empodia which differ in the number of rays. For example, 6 / 5-6 / 6 - 6 / 5 - 5 / 5; 3) 7 / 6 -rayed empodia are the most common form; 4) the frequency of 7 / 6 -rayed empodia is constantly high: 85 to 87 % among summer females and 79 % among overwintered females; 5) the frequency of 5 / 6 -, 7 / 5 - and 8 / 6 -rayed empodia is constantly low (1-2 %); 6) 6 / 5 - and 6 / 6 -rayed empodia are rather rare among summer females (<4 %) whereas among overwintered females, such variations of the empodia can be twice or thrice the number (9 % and 6 %, respectively). I consider 5 / 6 -, 6 / 5 -, 6 / 6 -, 7 / 5 - and 8 / 6 -rayed empodia to be aberrant forms. So, females of P. hirtae do not demonstrate such a distinct seasonal variability in the number of empodial rays as do females of P. atherodes . But in comparison with summer females, two tendencies are peculiar for the overwintered females of P. hirtae : a slight decrease in the frequency of the most common variant of the empodium (7 / 6) and an increased frequency of the aberrant forms of empodia with reduced numbers of rays (6 / 5 and 6 / 6). See Fig. 6. Intraspecific and interspecific morphological variability of P. atherodes and P. h i r ta e . These two mite species are very similar morphologically, moreover though, P. hirtae from geographically isolated populations differs slightly in some characters but most measurements overlap (Table 5). Principal component analysis (PCA) of the samples # 1, # 6, # 7, # 8 and # 9 (Table 2) was carried out to compare morphological variability of protogyne females of P . hirtae and P. atherodes by a complex of characters. Two main Factors I & II (Jolliffe 2002, StatSoft, Inc. 2011), representing together about 90 % of total morphological dispersion, were revealed (Fig. 7). Samples ## 2 to 5 which included many deutogynes were not analysed to avoid the accidental confusion between deutogynes and protogynes. Characters weakly correlated (r≤0.5) with Factors I and II were excluded from analysis. As a result, a complex of 6 characters was formed based on the number of empodial rays, length of ve , c 2 , d , sc and distance between tubercules of ve . The first 4 characters had a high correlation with factor I (r≥0.9) and the other two were highly correlated with factor II (r≥0.8). Graphically, the samples belonging to different species were distinctly separated by factor I (Fig. 7) which reflects interspecific variability. This fact may be a supplemental argument to the validity of the separation of the species P. hirtae and P. atherodes . Samples including P. h i r t a e differed by meaning of Factor II (Fig. 7). So that Factor II, reflects the intraspecific variability (variability between different populations) of this mite species. : Published as part of Chetverikov, Philipp E., 2011, Phytoptus atherodes sp. n. (Acari: Eriophyoidea: Phytoptidae) and a supplementary description of Phytoptus hirtae Roivainen 1950 from sedges (Cyperaceae), pp. 26-44 in Zootaxa 3045 on pages 35-40, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.200512 : {"references": ["Roivainen, H. (1950) Eriophyid news from Sweden. Acta Entomologica Fennica, 7, 1 - 51.", "Skoracka, A., Macuk, L. & Rakowski, W. (2004) New eriophyoid mites (Acari: Eriohyoidea) from sedges in Poland and supplement description of Eriophyes lentiginosus Mitrofanov, Sharonov et Sekerskaja, 1983. Zootaxa, 446, 1 - 15.", "Petanovic, R., Chetverikov, P. E. & Smiljani, D. (2007) Eriophyoid mites (Acari: Eriophyoidea) from sedges (Carex spp., Cyperaceae) in Serbia. Acta Entomologica Serbica, 12 (2), 107 - 113.", "Roivainen, H. (1953) Some gall mites (Eriophyidae) from Spain. 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