INVESTIGADORES
NAVA Santiago
artículos
Título:
New records of soft ticks (Acari: Argasidae) from caves in Brazil, with a morphological study of Ornithodoros fonsecai and an analysis of the taxonomic status of Antricola inexpectata
Autor/es:
DE OLIVEIRA, GLAUBER M.B.; MUÑOZ-LEAL, SEBASTIÁN; NAVA, SANTIAGO; HORTA, MAURÍCIO C.; BERNARDI, LEOPOLDO; VENZAL, JOSÉ MANUEL; LABRUNA, MARCELO B.
Revista:
Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases
Editorial:
Elsevier
Referencias:
Año: 2024 vol. 15
ISSN:
1877-959X
Resumen:
In this study, we report soft ticks from bat-inhabiting caves in different areas of Brazil. From 2010 to 2019, wecollected 807 tick specimens from nine caves located in four Brazilian states among two biomes. Ticks weremorphologically identified as Antricola guglielmonei (282 specimens), Ornithodoros cavernicolous (260 specimens),and Ornithodoros fonsecai (265 specimens). Whereas A. guglielmonei was collected on bat guano in hot caves,O. cavernicolous and O. fonsecai were collected in cracks and crevices on the walls of cold caves, sometimes in thesame chamber. Morphological identifications were corroborated by molecular and phylogenetic analysesinferred from tick mitochondrial 16S rRNA gene partial sequences. The sequences of A. guglielmonei, O. cavernicolousand O. fonsecai collected in this study clustered with conspecific GenBank sequences from differentlocalities of Brazil. Remarkably, a clade containing 12 sequences of O. fonsecai was clearly bifurcated, denoting adegree of genetic divergence (up to 5 %) of specimens from Cerrado/Atlantic Forest biomes with the specimensfrom the Caatinga biome. To further evaluate this divergence, we performed morphometric analysis of the larvalstage of different O. fonsencai populations by principal component analysis, which indicated that the larvae fromCaatinga populations were generally smaller than the larvae from other biomes. Some of the presentA. guglielmonei specimens were collected from the type locality of Antricola inexpectata. Comparisons of thesespecimens with the type specimens of A. inexpectata and A. guglielmonei indicated that they could not be separatedby their external morphology. Hence, we are relegating A. inexpectata to a synonym of A. guglielmonei. Thisproposal is corroborated by our phylogenetic analysis.