Cardinium bacteria, members of the phylum Cytophaga-Flavobacterium-Bacteroides (CFB), are intracellular bacteria in arthropods that are capable of inducing reproductive abnormalities in their hosts, which include parasitic wasps, mites, and spiders. A high frequency of Cardinium infection was detected in planthoppers (27 out of 57 species were infected). A high frequency of Cardinium infection was also found in spider mites (9 out of 22 species were infected). Frequencies of double infection by Cardinium and Wolbachia bacteria (Alphaproteobacteria capable of manipulating reproduction of their hosts) were disproportionately high in planthoppers but not in spider mites. A new group of bacteria, phylogenetically closely related to but distinct from previously described Cardinium bacteria (based on 16S rRNA and gyrB genes) was found in 4 out of 25 species of Culicoides biting midges. These bacteria possessed a microfilament-like structure that is a morphological feature previously found in Cardinium and Paenicardinium. The bacteria close to the genus Cardinium consist of at least three groups, A, B, and C. Group A is present in various species of arthropods and was previously referred to as "Candidatus Cardinium hertigii," group B is present in plant parasitic nematodes and was previously referred to as "Candidatus Paenicardinium endonii," and group C is present in Culicoides biting midges. On the basis of morphological and molecular data, we propose that the nomenclature of these three groups be integrated into a single species, "Candidatus Cardinium hertigii."Compared to the Wolbachia bacteria, which belong to the alpha subdivision of the phylum Proteobacteria and are known as master manipulators of arthropod reproduction (48), the Cardinium bacteria, which belong to the phylum CytophagaFlavobacterium-Bacteroides (CFB), are relatively new to biological study. The phylum CFB includes many other bacteria associated with arthropods, such as symbionts in cockroaches (3) and termites (4) and the male-killing agents of ladybird beetles (21). Cardinium was first observed in tick cell cultures as an unknown intracellular prokaryote that was rod shaped and had an array of tubes extending from the cytoplasmic membrane (22). In 2001, related symbiotic bacteria were reported as manipulators of arthropod reproduction because they caused feminization, by which genetic males were converted into phenotypic females, in the false spider mite Brevipalpas obovatus (45) and parthenogenesis, in which haploid eggs were converted into viable diploid females, in the parasitoid wasp Encarsia pergandiella (50). Since the 16S rRNA gene sequences of these bacteria exhibited 96% to 98% similarity to the tick microorganism, they were classified in the phylum CFB. Subsequently, bacteria in this group were found to induce cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI), in which uninfected female hosts produce few offspring when mated with infected males in parasitic wasps of the genus Encarsia (20) and in two spider mites, Eotetranychus suginamensis and Bryobi...