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Oribatida
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Oribatida (formerly Cryptostigmata), also known as oribatid mites, moss mites or beetle mites,

(2025). 9781402062421, Springer.
are an order of , in the "chewing " . They range in size from . There are currently 12,000 species that have been identified, but researchers estimate that there may be anywhere from 60,000 to 120,000 total species. Oribatid mites are by far the most prevalent of all arthropods in forest soils, and are essential for breaking down organic detritus and distributing fungi.

Oribatid mites generally have low rates, slow development and low fecundity. Species are iteroparous with adults living a relatively long time; for example, estimates of development time from egg to adult vary from several months to two years in soils. Oribatid mites have six active : prelarva, , three nymphal instars and the adult. All these stages after the prelarva feed on a wide variety of material including living and dead and material, and ; some are , but none is and feeding habits may differ between immatures and adults of the same species.

(2013). 9789400771642, Springer Science & Business Media. .

Many species have a mineralized exoskeleton as adults. In some, this includes a pair of pteromorphae: wing-like flaps that overhang the legs on either side. Some oribatids can also tuck in their legs underneath their protective armor, an ability known as ptychoidy, for more defence against predation.

are produced by some oribatids, presumably as another defence against predation. In turn, poison dart frogs that prey on oribatids sequester these alkaloids for their own defence.

The Oribatida are of economic importance as hosts of various /ref> and by increasing the breakdown of organic material in the soil, in a similar manner to .

Many species of oribatid mites require extremely specific habitats, resulting in large diversity within the order due to the many niches they evolve to. Some species are especially suited to dry conditions, or on bare lichen covered rocks, but that largest section of Oribatida prefers the moist forest floor and its accompanying litter. There are a small number of species who have evolved to live on aquatic plants, often spending the majority of their life submersed underwater.

In contrast to the commonly held view that lineages are short lived, four species-rich parthenogenetic clusters of the order Oribatida are very ancient and likely arose 400-300 million years ago. oribatid mite lineages have been hypothesized to be adapted to occupy narrow specialized ecological niches. However, it was recently shown that parthenogenetic oribatid mite species actually possess a widely adapted general-purpose , and thus each such lineage might be viewed as a “jack-of-all-trades”.

The , though once considered a separate group, are now considered part of Oribatida. They are quite different from other oribatids (e.g. many astigmatans are soft-bodied and some are parasitic), resulting in them often being treated separately.

(2025). 9780896726208, Texas Tech. University Press.

Oribatids have a long fossil record extending back to the middle , around 376-379 million years ago from Gilboa, New York, among the oldest known fossils of acariform mites.


Systematics
The order Oribatida is divided into the following taxa:

* Grandjean, 1932 (6 genera)
:* Grandjean, 1932

* Grandjean, 1932 (8 genera)
:* Grandjean, 1932

* Parhypochthonioidea Grandjean, 1969 (3 genera)
:* Parhypochthoniidae Grandjean, 1969
:* Gehypochthoniidae Strenzke, 1963
:* Elliptochthoniidae Norton, 1975

* , 1910 (c. 8 genera)
:* Berlese, 1910
:* Grandjean, 1947
:* Arborichthoniidae Balogh & Balogh, 1992

* Brachychthonoidea Thor, 1934 (c. 11 genera)
:* Brachychthoniidae Thor, 1934

* Cosmochthonioidea Grandjean, 1947 (c. 14 genera)
:* Grandjean, 1947
:* Heterochthoniidae Grandjean, 1954
:* Hammen, 1959
:* Lavoipierre, 1946
:* Sphaerochthoniidae Grandjean, 1947

* Atopochthonioidea Grandjean, 1949 (3 genera)
::* Grandjean, 1949
::* Grandjean, 1950
::* Phyllochthoniidae Travé, 1967

* Protoplophoroidea Ewing, 1917 (c. 7 genera)
:* Ewing, 1917

* Balogh & Mahunka, 1979

:* Nehypochthonioidea Norton & Metz, 1980
::* Nehypochthoniidae Norton & Metz, 1980

:* Grandjean, 1954
::* Grandjean, 1954
::* Grandjean, 1958

:* Grandjean, 1931
::* Grandjean, 1931

:* Oudemans, 1923
::* Oudemans, 1923

:* Berlese, 1916
::* Berlese, 1916

* Grandjean, 1967

:* Ewing, 1917
::* Ewing, 1917

:* Euphthiracaroidea Jacot, 1930
::* Grandjean, 1954
::* Jacot, 1930
::* Walker, 1965

:* Perty, 1841
::* Perty, 1841
::* Niedbała, 1986

* , 1876
:* Thrypochthoniidae Willmann, 1931
:* Berlese, 1916
:* Berlese, 1896
:* Oudemans, 1900
:* Thorell, 1876

* Sellnick, 1928
:* Sellnick, 1928

* Sellnick, 1928
:* Sellnick, 1928

* Grandjean, 1954
:* Grandjean, 1934 (2 families)
:* Sellnick, 1928 (1 family)
:* Trägårdh, 1926 (4 families)
:* Grandjean, 1954 (2 families)
:* Berlese, 1896 (1 family)
:* Polypterozetoidea Grandjean, 1959 (2 families)
:* Berlese, 1896 (7 families)
:* Grandjean, 1958 (3 families)
:* Grandjean, 1936 (1 family)
:* Michael, 1898 (1 family)
:* Oudemans, 1900 (8 families)
:* Oudemans, 1900 (4 families)
:* Grandjean, 1954 (10 families)
:* Balogh, 1961 (7 families)
:* Sellnick, 1937 (12 families)
:* Ewing, 1917 (6 families)
:* Balogh, 1961 (4 families)
:* Koch, 1837 (3 families)
:* Grandjean, 1954 (2 families)
:* Grandjean, 1954 (1 family)
:* Willmann, 1931 (3 families)
:* Sellnick, 1928 (3 families)

* Grandjean, 1954
:* Grandjean, 1931 (6 families)
:* Petrunkevitch, 1955 (1 family)
:* Kunst, 1971 (3 families)
:* Thor, 1937 (2 families)
:* Thor, 1929 (2 families)
:* Jacot, 1925 (3 families)
:* Jacot, 1925 (5 families)
:* Grandjean, 1934 (1 family)
:* Jacot, 1925 (19 families)
:* Jacot, 1925 (3 families)


See also


Further reading

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