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Phylogenetic Position of a New Trisetacus Mite Species (Nalepellidae) Destroying Seeds of North American Junipers and New Hypotheses on Basal Divergence of Eriophyoidea.

Philipp E ChetverikovBrian G RectorKirk TonkelLindsay DimitriDenis S CheglakovAnna E RomanovichJames Amrine
Published in: Insects (2022)
Eriophyoid mites of the genus Trisetacus Keifer are widespread parasites of conifers. A new oligophagous species, T. indelis   n. sp. , was discovered severely damaging seeds of North American junipers ( Juniperus osteosperma , J. occidentalis , and J. californica ) in the western USA. It has two codon deletions in the mitochondrial gene Cox1 rarely detected in Eriophyoidea and includes distinct morphological dimorphism of females. A phylogenetic analysis based on amino acid alignment of translated Cox1 sequences using a large set of out-groups (a) determined that two North American congeners, T. batonrougei and T. neoquadrisetus, were the closest known relatives of T. indelis   n. sp. , and (b) indicated that Old and New World seed-inhabiting Trisetacus from junipers do not form a distinct clade, suggesting a possible independent transition to living in seeds of junipers in America and Eurasia by Trisetacus spp. Our analysis produced a new topology consistent with a scenario assuming gradual reduction of prodorsal shield setation in Eriophyoidea and an ancient switch from gymnosperms to other hosts. Additionally, our analysis did not support monophyly of Trisetacus ; recovered a new host-specific, moderately supported clade comprising Trisetacus and Nalepellinae ( Nalepella + Setoptus ) associated with Pinaceae; and questioned the monophyly of Trisetacus associated with Cupressaceae.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • oxidative stress
  • transcription factor