Parasitengona is a group of mites, variously ranked as a hyporder[1] or a cohort,[2] between the taxonomic ranks of order and family.
They are divided into the aquatic Hydrachnidia (water mites) and the terrestrial Trombidia.[3] The latter includes velvet mites and chiggers.[4]
Many Parasitengona are relatively large (for mite standards) and have a bright red colouration.[3] Other colours include purple, orange, yellow, blue, green and brown.[5] The terrestrial Trombidia are often hypertrichous, meaning they are covered in many irregularly arranged setae. The chelicerae bases are separate, the fixed cheliceral digit is absent and the movable digit is either hooked or linear. The palps are often raptorial with a claw-like seta on the tibia. The gnathosoma is retractable within group Erythraeina. The stigmata and peritremes, when present, are between the cheliceral bases. In Trombidia, there is usually one or two pairs of trichobothria on the prodorsum, and these are often mounted on a linear sclerotised plate (crista metopica). There are almost always well-developed eye lenses. Genital papillae are usually present but vary in their size and number.[6]
Eggs of Trombidia are usually reddish, but those within superfamily Erythraeoidea are brown-black due to a lipid-protein cover. Eggs of Hydrachnidia have a gelatinous sheath.[3]
The life cycle of Parasitengona consists of the egg, prelarva, larva, protonymph (also known as the nymphochrysalis), deutonymph, tritonymph (imagochrysalis) and adult. The larva, deutoynmph and adult stages are active, while the remaining stages are inactive.[5][7]
The deutonymph is usually the primary growth stage. However, larvae of species of Trombidium and Eutrombidium (Trombidia) and Eylais and Hydrachna (Hydrachnidia) can grow additional cuticle without moulting (neosomy), so these species grow most in the larval stage.[3]
Almost all parasitengones have two distinct sexes (dioecious). Males transfer sperm to females indirectly via stalked spermatophores. Female lay eggs usually in one to three clutches.[3]
Larvae of Parasitengona are usually ectoparasites of arthropods, and they make up most of the red mites that can be found attached to arthropods. Some (e.g. chiggers) use vertebrates as hosts instead. There are also species with free-living larvae.[7][8]
Some examples are larval Neotrombidium beeri, which live beneath elytra of false mealworm beetles, and larval Arrenurus, which parasitise Odonata.[4] Twenty-one species across six families are myrmecophilous, meaning they are associated with ants.[9] Non-biting midges (Chironomidae) are the most common host for water mites, while crane flies (Tipulidae) are hosts for both water mites and Trombidia.[5]
Deutonymphs and adults are usually predators on other arthropods, especially immobile life stages such as eggs and pupae. Again, some species have other diets, such as species of Balaustium that feed on pollen[10] or on the sap of plants.[11]
According to a molecular phylogenetic analysis using the genes 18S, 28S and COI, Hydrachnidia (water mites) is nested within Trombidia (terrestrial parasitengone mites) and the sister group to Calyptostomatoidea, Stygothrombioidea is the sister group to all other Parasitengona, Erythraeoidea and Tanaupodoidea are sister groups, and Trombiculoidea is a paraphyletic clade along with Chyzerioidea in relation to Trombidioidea.[5]
As of 2011,[12] the taxonomic composition of Parasitengona was as follows:
Parasitengona is a group of mites, variously ranked as a hyporder or a cohort, between the taxonomic ranks of order and family.
They are divided into the aquatic Hydrachnidia (water mites) and the terrestrial Trombidia. The latter includes velvet mites and chiggers.
Les Parasitengona forment un hypo-ordre d'acariens de l'ordre des Trombidiformes, du sous-ordre des Prostigmata et de la cohorte des Anystina.
Allotanaupodoidea - Amphotrombioidea - Arrenuroidea - Calyptostomatoidea - Chyzerioidea - Erythraeoidea - Eylaoidea - Hydrachnoidea - Hydrovolzioidea - Hydryphantoidea - Hygrobatoidea - Lebertioidea - Stygothrombidioidea - Tanaupodoidea - Trombiculoidea - Trombidioidea - Yurebilloidea
Les Parasitengona forment un hypo-ordre d'acariens de l'ordre des Trombidiformes, du sous-ordre des Prostigmata et de la cohorte des Anystina.