2013
DOI: 10.1007/s00436-013-3537-6
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Ectoparasitic insects and mites on Yunnan red-backed voles (Eothenomys miletus) from a localized area in southwest China

Abstract: Ectoparasitic insects and mites on Yunnan red-backed voles (Eothenomys miletus) in Dali prefecture, Yunnan Province, southwest China, were studied between 2003 and 2004. In total, 34,389 individuals of 86 species of ectoparasitic insects (seven species of fleas and five species of sucking lice) and mites (23 species of gamasid mites and 51 species of chigger mites) were collected from 916 individual hosts. The diversity of ectoparasites on this single rodent species in such a small area was much higher than in… Show more

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Cited by 32 publications
(40 citation statements)
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“…The consistency in these results confirms that chigger mites and gamasid mites are predominant ectoparasites on the vole. In comparison with previous work conducted in a more localized area (Guo et al ., , the present study covered the entire range of distribution of E. miletus and found many more species of parasite than did the earlier study. The extensive sampling and the comparatively large host sample makes the present results more stable and allowed for the collection of many species of parasite, including some rare species which may not be found in a localized collection with a limited host sample.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 46%
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“…The consistency in these results confirms that chigger mites and gamasid mites are predominant ectoparasites on the vole. In comparison with previous work conducted in a more localized area (Guo et al ., , the present study covered the entire range of distribution of E. miletus and found many more species of parasite than did the earlier study. The extensive sampling and the comparatively large host sample makes the present results more stable and allowed for the collection of many species of parasite, including some rare species which may not be found in a localized collection with a limited host sample.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 46%
“…Moreover, some species of gamasid mite [e.g. of the genera Cosmolaelaps , Hypoaspis , Gymnolaelaps , Macrocheles , Holostaspella , Euryparasitus , Vulgarogamasus , Parasitus , Lasioseius , Proctolaelaps , Neparholaspis , Gamasholaspis , Pachylaelaps and Sinoseius (Table )] are actually free‐living species in soil, litter and humus (Pan & Deng, ; Radovsky, ; Guo et al ., ; Huang et al ., ) and thus are not true ‘ectoparasites’. These free‐living gamasid mites may have crawled onto the body surfaces of voles by accident.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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