4 66 



ARACHNIDA ACARINA 



CHAP. 



Fam. 1. Sarcoptidae. No tracheae or stigmata. Apical 

 rostrum. Oviparous or ovoviviparous. The seventy genera and 

 530 odd species of this family are .divided into a number of 



sub-families, of which the principal are the 

 Sarcoptinae, the Analgesiuae, and the Tyro- 

 glyphinae. 



(i.) The Sarcoptinae are the so-called " Itch- 

 mites." They are minute animals, with bodies 

 transversely wrinkled and legs terminating in 

 suckers or bristles. The genus Sarcoptes, 

 which includes about fifteen species, lives in 

 tunnels which it burrows in the skin of 

 mammals. 



(ii.) The Analgesinae are the " Birds'- 

 feather Mites." The principal genera are 

 Pteroliclius (120 species), Pteronyssus (33 

 species), Analges (23 species), Megninia (42 

 species), and Alloptes (33 species). 



(iii.) The Tyroglyphinae l have received the 

 popular name of " Cheese -mites," from the 

 best known example of the group. They 

 are smooth-bodied, soft-skinned white Mites, 

 with legs usually terminating in a single claw, 

 -TSSSS^ sometimes accompanied by a sucker. They 



are for the most part carrion -feeders, living 

 A, Leg of a U p 0n decaying animal or vegetable matter, 



t(i with 

 "leg-siMh" ; B, but a few are parasitic on mammals, insects, 



female of Sarcoptes j worms 



mutans, greatly 



magnified. (After There are sixteen genera, including about 



Neumann.) ,. /, //? 77 i rn 7 



fifty species. Tyroglyphus siro and 1 . Longior 

 are common Cheese-mites. Other species live in decaying 

 vegetables and food -stuffs. Some of the genus Glycyphagus 

 (G. palmifer, G. plumiger} are very remarkable for the palmate 

 or plumose hairs which decorate their bodies. The remarkable 

 hypopial stage in the development of Tyroglyphus has been 

 mentioned on. p. 463. The Tyroglyphinae are the lowest of the 

 free-living Acariue forms. 



1 See Michael, British Tyroglyphidae, published by the Ray Society, 1901-2. 



