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First ultrastructural observations on a putative sperm access system in veigaiid females (Veigaiidae, Gamasida)

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Trends in Acarology

Abstract

Females of Dermanyssina display a reproductive system composed of a region involved in egg production and laying and another involved in sperm reception and likely storage. This second region is called the sperm access system, and it is related to a peculiar sperm transfer mode known as podospermy. Males have the chelicerae modified as gonopods which possess a peculiar process on the movable digit, the so-called spermatodactyl, which is used for sperm transfer. In Veigaiidae, males are rarely, exceptionally, or never found, and some species are considered to reproduce parthenogenetically. Known veigaiid males have spermatodactyls, sometimes of extraordinary length. The conspecific females have so-called spiral organs located behind coxae IV. It is likely that these organs, not known from other gamasid mites, represent the veigaiid sperm access system. In the present study, first ultrastructural details on these peculiar organs are given comparing a bisexual species (Veigaia sp.) with two species in which males are extremely rare (V. nemorensis and V. cerva). Each of these structures is composed of a major tube starting from the opening, a vesicle-like region, and several minor tubes. In general it is considered to be derived from an entapophysis. Muscles attach to the minor tube region. A general similarity to the phytoseiid type of sperm access systems may be noted. But preliminary observations on the whole genital system of both female and male veigaiids also reveal a resemblance to the genital system in Parasitina. Whether these findings may challenge the current status of Parasitina and/or Dermanyssina will require further investigations.

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Correspondence to Gerd Alberti .

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Alberti, G., di Palma, A., Krantz, G.W., Błaszak, C. (2010). First ultrastructural observations on a putative sperm access system in veigaiid females (Veigaiidae, Gamasida). In: Sabelis, M., Bruin, J. (eds) Trends in Acarology. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-9837-5_9

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