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PARASITIC WATER MITE LARVAE (HYDRACHNIDA: HYGROBATOIDEA) ASSOCIATED WITH CADDISFLY LARVAE (TRICHOPTERA: LEPTOCERIDAE, LIMNEPHILIDAE)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

Wayne L. Fairchild
Affiliation:
Department of Entomology, Macdonald College of McGill University, 21,111 Lakeshore Road, Ste. Anne de Bellevue, Quebec, Canada H9X 1C0
David J. Lewis
Affiliation:
Department of Entomology, Macdonald College of McGill University, 21,111 Lakeshore Road, Ste. Anne de Bellevue, Quebec, Canada H9X 1C0

Abstract

In the course of benthic sampling during 1981 and 1982 in Lake St. Louis, Que., 28 water mite larvae (Hygrobatidae: Hygrobates) were found parasitizing caddisfly larvae (Leptoceridae: Nectopsyche, Oecetis, Ceraclea). Two other water mite larvae (Unionicolidae: Unionicola) also were found: one on Nectopsyche from Lake St. Louis, and the other on Limnephilus (Limnephilidae) from the Magundy Stream, N.B. Prevalence of parasitism ranged from 8 to 42%. Mite distribution among available hosts suggests host selection by the mites or the absence of mites from certain microhabitats. Parasitism of fully submerged insect larvae by mite larvae represents a further derivation from ancestral behavior patterns. This paper describes five of the seven documented cases of such parasitism on Trichoptera larvae.

Résumé

Lors d’un échantillonnage du benthos du lac Saint-Louis (Que.) effectué en 1981 et 1982, 28 larves de mites aquatiques parasites (Hygrobatidés : Hygrobates) ont été trouvées sur des larves des trichoptères (Leptocéridés : Nectopsyche, Oecetis, Ceraclea). Deux autres larves de mites aquatiques (Unionicolidés : Unionicola) ont aussi été observées : l’une sur le genre Nectopsyche au lac Saint-Louis, et l’autre sur le genre Limnephilus (Limnéphilidés) dans le ruisseau Magundy, au N.-B. Le taux de parasitisme variait entre 8 et 42%. La distribution des mites entre les hôtes disponibles laisse croire à une forme de sélection ou à l’absence de mites dans certains microhabitats. Le parasitisme des larves d’insectes submergées par des larves de mites constitue pour celle-ci une autre déviation par rapport à leur comportement ancestral. Ce document décrit cinq des sept cas de parasitisme de ce genre étudiés sur des larves de trichoptères.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1987

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