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Description of the male and the larva of Ixodes collaris Hornok, 2016 with drawings of all stages

BACKGROUND: Ixodes collaris Hornok, 2016 is a recently discovered tick species associated with bats in Asia. This study provides the description of the male and the larva, as well as high quality drawings of all stages. METHODS: Ticks were collected from cave walls and bats in Phia Oac (Vietnam). DN...

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Autores principales: Hornok, Sándor, Murányi, Dávid, Kontschán, Jenő, Tu, Vuong Tan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6434778/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30914054
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13071-019-3365-3
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author Hornok, Sándor
Murányi, Dávid
Kontschán, Jenő
Tu, Vuong Tan
author_facet Hornok, Sándor
Murányi, Dávid
Kontschán, Jenő
Tu, Vuong Tan
author_sort Hornok, Sándor
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Ixodes collaris Hornok, 2016 is a recently discovered tick species associated with bats in Asia. This study provides the description of the male and the larva, as well as high quality drawings of all stages. METHODS: Ticks were collected from cave walls and bats in Phia Oac (Vietnam). DNA was extracted from one individual of each stage/sex, while another was morphometrically analysed. Based on two genetic markers, all ticks were identified as I. collaris. RESULTS: The male of I. collaris has long legs (i.e. the length of Haller’s organ exceeds the maximum diameter of tarsus I), unlike the male of I. simplex Neumann, 1906, but similarly to males of I. vespertilionis Koch, 1844 and I. ariadnae Hornok, 2014. The lateral and medial edges of the palpi of male I. collaris are both convexly curved, unlike in I. ariadnae and I. simplex, but similarly to I. vespertilionis. The male of I. collaris has long palpal setae (up to 210 µm), unlike the males of I. ariadnae (30–100 µm) and I. simplex (20–80 µm), but similarly to I. vespertilionis (100–200 µm). Males of I. collaris have sparse distribution of long palpal setae (vs dense in I. vespertilionis) and posteriorly diverging, sclerotized trapezoid ridge dorsally on the basis capituli (posteriorly convergent, U-shaped and less evident in I. vespertilionis). The larva of I. collaris has long legs (unlike the larva of I. simplex, but similarly to I. vespertilionis and I. ariadnae), elongated club-shaped palpi (240 × 70 vs 200 × 90 µm in I. ariadnae, 200 × 70 µm in I. vespertilionis; and 140 × 60 µm in I. simplex:), pentagonal scutum, which is longer than broad (different from I. ariadnae and I. simplex, but similar to that of I. vespertilionis). The larva of I. collaris has strongly concave caudolateral margin of ventral basis with perpendicular angle (vs slightly concave, with obtuse angle in I. vespertilionis) and a prominent, dark sclerotized edge, “collar” (absent in I. vespertilionis). CONCLUSION: Several features allow to distinguish the male and the larva of I. collaris morphologically from those of other bat-associated ixodid tick species.
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spelling pubmed-64347782019-04-08 Description of the male and the larva of Ixodes collaris Hornok, 2016 with drawings of all stages Hornok, Sándor Murányi, Dávid Kontschán, Jenő Tu, Vuong Tan Parasit Vectors Short Report BACKGROUND: Ixodes collaris Hornok, 2016 is a recently discovered tick species associated with bats in Asia. This study provides the description of the male and the larva, as well as high quality drawings of all stages. METHODS: Ticks were collected from cave walls and bats in Phia Oac (Vietnam). DNA was extracted from one individual of each stage/sex, while another was morphometrically analysed. Based on two genetic markers, all ticks were identified as I. collaris. RESULTS: The male of I. collaris has long legs (i.e. the length of Haller’s organ exceeds the maximum diameter of tarsus I), unlike the male of I. simplex Neumann, 1906, but similarly to males of I. vespertilionis Koch, 1844 and I. ariadnae Hornok, 2014. The lateral and medial edges of the palpi of male I. collaris are both convexly curved, unlike in I. ariadnae and I. simplex, but similarly to I. vespertilionis. The male of I. collaris has long palpal setae (up to 210 µm), unlike the males of I. ariadnae (30–100 µm) and I. simplex (20–80 µm), but similarly to I. vespertilionis (100–200 µm). Males of I. collaris have sparse distribution of long palpal setae (vs dense in I. vespertilionis) and posteriorly diverging, sclerotized trapezoid ridge dorsally on the basis capituli (posteriorly convergent, U-shaped and less evident in I. vespertilionis). The larva of I. collaris has long legs (unlike the larva of I. simplex, but similarly to I. vespertilionis and I. ariadnae), elongated club-shaped palpi (240 × 70 vs 200 × 90 µm in I. ariadnae, 200 × 70 µm in I. vespertilionis; and 140 × 60 µm in I. simplex:), pentagonal scutum, which is longer than broad (different from I. ariadnae and I. simplex, but similar to that of I. vespertilionis). The larva of I. collaris has strongly concave caudolateral margin of ventral basis with perpendicular angle (vs slightly concave, with obtuse angle in I. vespertilionis) and a prominent, dark sclerotized edge, “collar” (absent in I. vespertilionis). CONCLUSION: Several features allow to distinguish the male and the larva of I. collaris morphologically from those of other bat-associated ixodid tick species. BioMed Central 2019-03-26 /pmc/articles/PMC6434778/ /pubmed/30914054 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13071-019-3365-3 Text en © The Author(s) 2019 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Short Report
Hornok, Sándor
Murányi, Dávid
Kontschán, Jenő
Tu, Vuong Tan
Description of the male and the larva of Ixodes collaris Hornok, 2016 with drawings of all stages
title Description of the male and the larva of Ixodes collaris Hornok, 2016 with drawings of all stages
title_full Description of the male and the larva of Ixodes collaris Hornok, 2016 with drawings of all stages
title_fullStr Description of the male and the larva of Ixodes collaris Hornok, 2016 with drawings of all stages
title_full_unstemmed Description of the male and the larva of Ixodes collaris Hornok, 2016 with drawings of all stages
title_short Description of the male and the larva of Ixodes collaris Hornok, 2016 with drawings of all stages
title_sort description of the male and the larva of ixodes collaris hornok, 2016 with drawings of all stages
topic Short Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6434778/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30914054
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13071-019-3365-3
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