Publications by authors named "A G Tolstikov"

Article Synopsis
  • - Parasitengona, a diverse group of mites including velvet mites and chiggers, consists of over 11,000 species found in various habitats and is significant due to certain species' roles as disease vectors.
  • - The classification of Parasitengona remains debated, with unclear boundaries between its superfamilies and families, while most species undergo metamorphosis, although the Allotanaupodoidea superfamily shows exceptions.
  • - A recent study conducted phylogenetic analysis suggesting that Parasitengona likely originated on land and led to a new classification within the superfamily Trombidioidea, proposing three new major divisions based on genetic relationships.
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This study provides additional morphological information and new illustrations for three species of Ololaelaps Berlese described by Bregetova Koroleva (1964) from RussiaO. caucasicus, O. sellnicki and O.

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Eriophyoid mites represent a hyperdiverse, phytophagous lineage with an unclear phylogenetic position. These mites have succeeded in colonizing nearly every seed plant species, and this evolutionary success was in part due to the mites' ability to induce galls in plants. A gall is a unique niche that provides the inducer of this modification with vital resources.

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Metamorphosis is a key innovation allowing the same species to inhabit different environments and accomplish different functions, leading to evolutionary success in many animal groups. Astigmata is a megadiverse lineage of mites that expanded into a great number of habitats via associations with invertebrate and vertebrate hosts (human associates include stored food mites, house dust mites, and scabies). The evolutionary success of Astigmata is linked to phoresy-related metamorphosis, namely the origin of the heteromorphic deutonymph, which is highly specialized for phoresy (dispersal on hosts).

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