“…However, with regard to the modus operandi of the respiratory gas exchange and the control of tracheal water loss, the functional morphology of the spiracle of ixodid ticks has so far been deduced mainly from light microscopical or histological investigations considering only a few species of the genera lxodes (Batelli, 1891;Norden-ski61d, 1906;Bonnet, 1907;Schulze, 1923;Falke, 1931;Arthur, 1956;Babos, 1964), Haernaphysalis (Nuttall et al, 1908;Roshdy and Hefnawy, 1973;Roshdy, 1974;Sixl and Sixl-Voigt, 1974) and Dermacentor (Bishopp and Wood, 1913;Arthur, 1960;Babos, 1964). Scanning electron microscopical (SEM) studies included species of the genera Ixodes (Sixl et al, 1971;Woolley, 1972;Sixl and Sixl-Voigt, 1974;Pugh et al, 1988), Aponomma (Pugh et al, 1990), Dermacentor (Sixl et al, 1971;Woolley, 1972;Pugh et al, 1990), Rhipicephalus (Pugh et al, 1990), Boophilus (Hinton, 1967;Roshdy and Hefnawy, 1973;Roshdy, 1974), Haemaphysalis (Sixl et al, 1971;Woolley, 1972;Roshdy and Hefnawy, 1973;Roshdy, 1974;Sixl and Sixl-Voigt, 1974) and Arnb~yomma (Woolley, 1972;Rudolph and Kniille, 1979), but were almost exclusively confined to the depiction of the surface profile of the spiracular plate (Hinton, 1967;Roshdy and Hefnawy, 1973;Roshdy, 1974) or, additionally, to its structural organization …”