Linognathus setosus

Linognathus setosus (von Olfers, 1816) Pediculus setosus von Olfers, 1816: 80. Pediculus piliferus Burmeister, 1838 *: Species 13. Haematopinus piliferous [sic] (Burmeister); Denny 1842: 28, pl. 25: fig. 4. Haematopinus bicolor Lucas, 1847: 538, pl. 9: fig. 2a. Pediculus isopus Nitzsch [in Giebel],...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kazim, Abdul-Rahman, Houssaini, Jamal, Tappe, Dennis, Heo, Chong-Chin
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2022
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7390927
http://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D6E628FFF59616FF2870640319F8CA
Description
Summary:Linognathus setosus (von Olfers, 1816) Pediculus setosus von Olfers, 1816: 80. Pediculus piliferus Burmeister, 1838 *: Species 13. Haematopinus piliferous [sic] (Burmeister); Denny 1842: 28, pl. 25: fig. 4. Haematopinus bicolor Lucas, 1847: 538, pl. 9: fig. 2a. Pediculus isopus Nitzsch [in Giebel], 1861: 290. Pediculus flavidus Nitzsch, 1864: 27. Haematopinus piliferus (Burmeister, 1839) [sic]; Giebel 1874: 40. Haematopinus piliferus (Burmeister, 1838); Piaget 1880: 643, pl. 52: fig. 6. Haematopinus piliferus (Burmeister, 1838); Osborn 1896: 169, fig. 98. Trichaulus piliferus (Burmeister, 1838); Enderlein 1904a: 142. Linognathus piliferus (Burmeister, 1838); Enderlein 1905: 194. Linognathus piliferus (Burmeister, 1838); Mjöberg 1910: 157, fig. 77. Linognathus setosus (von Olfers, 1816); Ferris 1916: 205. Linognathus piliferus (Burmeister, 1838); Ewing 1929: 39, fig. 75. Linognathus setosus (von Olfers, 1816); Ferris 1932: 340, figs 206–207, 216E. Linognathus setosus (von Olfers, 1816); Ferris 1951: 235, figs 103–104. Linognathus setosus (von Olfers, 1816); Kim et al . 1986: 130, pl. 40. Linognathus setosus (von Olfers, 1816); Durden & Musser, 1994: 42. Type host: Canis lupus familiaris Linnaeus, 1758 —Domestic dog. Malaysian host: Felis catus Linnaeus, 1758 (see Remarks). Malaysian locality: Not given (Collela et al. 2020). Geographical distribution: Cosmopolitan (Durden & Musser 1994; Price & Graham 1997). Remarks: The adult male and female of L. setosus were redescribed and illustrated by Ferris (1932a). In Malaysia, Colella et al. (2020) recorded Linognathus setosus from approximately 21 out of 1152 cats examined (1.8% relative frequency), but the authors did not discuss the unusual occurrence of this louse on cats, given that L. setosus was known as a specific parasite of domestic dogs and other canines (Durden & Musser 1994). Unlike Heterodoxus spiniger (Enderlein, 1909), which some regarded as a general “carnivore” louse (Colless 1959; Price & Graham 1997; Norhidayu et al. 2012), the ...