2015
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-017-9861-7_5
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The Minute Litter Bugs (Dipsocoromorpha)

Abstract: Dipsocoromorpha, the minute litter bugs, are the putatively least known infraorder of true bugs. Despite their astounding morphology, the small size and cryptic habits of Dipsocoromorpha have resulted in limited curated museum collections. Few specialists have focused on this group. In the Neotropical and elsewhere region, Ceratocombidae, Dipsocoridae, and Schizopteridae are represented by ca. 120 described species in 22 genera. The true diversity in the Neotropics, but also the tropics of the Old World, is cl… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Dipsocoromorpha, the minute litter bugs, are classified into five families and now comprise ~430 described species (Schuh and Slater, ; Weirauch and Fernandes, ; Knyshov et al., ; Leon and Weirauch, ,b), with greatest morphological diversity found among the ~350 species of Schizopteridae, the largest family in the infraorder. The biology of Dipsocoromorpha is poorly documented, mostly because of the small size and cryptic habits of these bugs.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dipsocoromorpha, the minute litter bugs, are classified into five families and now comprise ~430 described species (Schuh and Slater, ; Weirauch and Fernandes, ; Knyshov et al., ; Leon and Weirauch, ,b), with greatest morphological diversity found among the ~350 species of Schizopteridae, the largest family in the infraorder. The biology of Dipsocoromorpha is poorly documented, mostly because of the small size and cryptic habits of these bugs.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet even free-living insects can be extremely miniaturized, with body sizes notably below 1 mm. Distinct size reduction often concerns entire groups specialized in unusual habitats, such as deep soil (e.g., leptotyphline rove beetles; Grebennikov & Newton, 2008), leaf litter (e.g., dipsocoromorph true bugs; Weirauch & Marin Fernandes, 2015) or specialized aquatic habitats (e.g., myxophagan beetles; Yavorskaya et al, 2018). Their small size makes some of these groups textbook examples of miniaturization, even though the species are very often overlooked in the field and largely neglected among researchers.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Schizopteridae is composed of tiny (body length ~0.8-3.0mm) usually dull colored true bugs that are found mainly in cryptic habitats such as leaf litter, under bark of fallen trees, and forest canopies (Emsley, 1969;Weirauch & Štys, 2014;Weirauch & Fernandes, 2015;Schuh & Weirauch, 2020). This family is composed of about 60 genera and more than 350 described species distributed in all biogeographic regions, but with the greatest diversity in tropical and subtropical regions (Weirauch & Štys, 2014;Weirauch & Fernandes, 2015;Schuh & Weirauch, 2020).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%