Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Gigantolaelaps
Genus of mites From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Gigantolaelaps is a genus of mites in the family Laelapidae. It is found in the fur of cricetid rodents, most often from the tribe Oryzomyini, from South America north to the southern United States. They are large (>1 mm) and darkly colored and have a complex life cycle.[1]
Remove ads
Species
- Gigantolaelaps aitkeni[2]
- Gigantolaelaps amazonae[2]
- Gigantolaelaps barrerai[2]
- Gigantolaelaps boneti (from Peromyscus mexicanus, Handleyomys chapmani, Megadontomys cryophilus, Peromyscus melanocarpus, and Oryzomys couesi in Oaxaca;[3] includes G. tropedai)[4]
- Gigantolaelaps brachyspinosus (from Holochilus brasiliensis)[4]
- Gigantolaelaps canestrinii[2]
- Gigantolaelaps fonsecai (incertae sedis)[4]
- Gigantolaelaps gilmorei[2]
- Gigantolaelaps goyanensis[4] (includes G. strandtmanni)[5]
- Gigantolaelaps guimaraesi[2]
- Gigantolaelaps inca[2]
- Gigantolaelaps intermedia[2]
- Gigantolaelaps mattogrossensis[4] (includes G. cricetidarum)[1]
- Gigantolaelaps maximus (incertae sedis)[4]
- Gigantolaelaps oudemansi[2]
- Gigantolaelaps peruviana[2]
- Gigantolaelaps striatus[2]
- Gigantolaelaps tiptoni[4]
- Gigantolaelaps versteegi[2]
- Gigantolaelaps vitzthumi[2] (includes G. bahiensis and G. bipilosus)[4]
- Gigantolaelaps wolffsohni Fonseca, 1939[2] (includes G. butantanensis and G. comatus)[6]
Remove ads
References
Literature cited
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads