Poecilochirus Macgillavryi
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''Poecilochirus'' is a Holarctic genus of mites in the family Parasitidae. They are relatively large (ca. 0.5-1mm) and often found on rotting corpses, where they are transported by beetles. Deuteronymphs are characterized by two orange dorsal shields and in many species a transverse band on the sternal shield. The juvenile development consists of a larval stage (three pairs of legs), protonymph, and deuteronymph, but no tritonymph. Females are smaller than males. Males guard female deuteronymphs shortly before these mate, and pairs mate venter-to-venter. Reportedly, some
nematode The nematodes ( or grc-gre, Νηματώδη; la, Nematoda) or roundworms constitute the phylum Nematoda (also called Nemathelminthes), with plant-Parasitism, parasitic nematodes also known as eelworms. They are a diverse animal phylum inhab ...
s in the family Allantonematidae are parasites of mites in this genus. Although some species from this genus have been described and sampled on previous real forensic cases or successional studies on carcasses, their usefulness as a forensic marker in forensic entomology has been recently appreciated.


Phoresy on carrion beetles

At least eight species of the genus are carried from one food source to another by beetles of multiple genera in the family Silphidae, most notably burying beetles. The mite
deutonymph Mites are small arachnids (eight-legged arthropods). Mites span two large orders of arachnids, the Acariformes and the Parasitiformes, which were historically grouped together in the subclass Acari, but genetic analysis does not show clear evid ...
s sit on the adult beetles, typically between the coxae or under the elytrons. The beetles breed on carrion, which some species bury. Once arrived on carrion, the mites leave the beetles, feed on the carrion, and develop into adults. The entire life cycle of the mites takes place on the carrion, and the young mites later leave again with the beetles. The probably best studied species are from the '' Poecilochirus carabi'' species complex that consists of at least two species (''P. carabi'' and ''P. necrophori''). In Europe, the two mite species are specialized on two different species of burying beetles, '' Nicrophorus vespilloides'' and '' Nicrophorus vespillo''. The mites can recognize their main host beetle species and can produce more offspring along their preferred host beetle. Similarly, two genetic lines of ''Poecilochirus carabi'' mites have been reported from North America, which specialize on different sets of ''Nicrophorus'' hosts in some populations. It is debated whether the mites harm the beetles or benefit them. Under certain conditions, the mites appear to protect the beetles' larvae or their food supply from fly larvae, but the presence of mites on beetle-tended carcasses also reduces male beetle life span and the number of beetle offspring.


Species and Identification

There is no recent treatment of the genus ''Poecilochirus''. Identification keys mostly rely on the extent of a dark band across the sternal shield, the size of the dorsal shields, the doral chaetotaxy (mainly the length of the setae), and appendices of the fixed digit of the chelicerae. The first description of all life stages was published by Neumann. A study of the ''Poecilochirus carabi'' complex genetics suggests that the species complex consists of many more than only two species (''P. necrophori'' and ''P. carabi''). The mites from Asia and America that would previously have been identified as ''P. carabi'' based on their morphology are from distinct genetic lineages. Data suggest that there may be 17 different ''P. carabi'' complex species that are not yet described. In addition, the mites that have been identified as ''P. subterraneus'' based on their morphology also likely belong to more than one species.


References

{{Taxonbar, from=Q7207299 Parasitidae