Brevipalpus californicus sensu lato
Authority
Banks
Taxonomic history
Tenuipalpus californicus - original designation
Hystripalpus californicus - Mitrofanov & Strunkova (1979)
Synonyms
B. browningi Baker 1949:382 (Palestine) [syn. Pritchard and Baker 1958]
B. confusus Baker 1949:380 (USA - MD) [syn. Pritchard and Baker 1958]
B. woglumi McGregor 1949:19 (USA - CA) [syn. Pritchard and Baker 1951]
Tenuipalpus australis Tucker 1926:3 (South Africa, Zimbabwe) [syn. Pritchard and Baker 1958]
T. vitis Womersley 1940:241 (Australia) [syn. Pritchard and Baker 1958]
Suspected synonyms
B. huananis Ma & Yuan
B. junicus Ma & Yuan
Species group characters
B. californicus species group (sensu Baker & Tuttle 1987) = f2 present; tarsus II with 2 solenidia; palp 4-segmented with 3 distal setae; dorsal central setae (c1, d1, e1) different in shape to dorsal lateral setae (c3, d3, e3)
Characters
see Brevipalpus californicus group species A, B, C
Distribution based on confirmed specimens
Australia, Ecuador, Israel, Italy, Kenya, Mexico, Nepal, Palestine, Peru, South Africa, Spain, Sri Lanka, Thailand, USA (*CA, HI, MD, TX)
* - holotype
Hosts based on confirmed specimens
Annonaceae (Chirimoya sp.); Arecaceae (coconut Cocos nucifera); Bignoniaceae (Begonia sp.); Convolvulaceae (sweet potato Ipomoea batatas); Lauraceae (avocado Persea americana); Geraniaceae (Geranium sp.); Orchidaceae (Aerangis sp., Dendrobium sp., Renanthera monachica); Pinaceae (Abies sp.); Rutaceae (Choisya ternata, Citrus spp., C. aurantifolia, C. limon, C. nobilis var. deliciosa, C. reticulata, C. x paradisi, C. sinensis*, C. tangerina, orange*); Theaceae (tea Camellia sinensis)
* - holotype
Remarks
Mites identified as Brevipalpus californicus sensu lato were found to be strongly associated with the nuclear citrus leprosis viruses, citrus leprosis virus N (CiLV-N) and citrus necrotic spot virus (CiNSV) (Roy et al. 2015).
Roy, A., Hartung, J.S., Schneider, W.L., Shao, J., León, M.G., Melzer, M.J., Beard, J.J., Otero-Colina, G., Bauchan, G.R., Ochoa, R. & Brlansky, R.H. (2015) Role bending: complex relationships between viruses, hosts and vectors related to citrus leprosies, an emerging disease. Phytopathology (in press).
References
Baker (1949); *Banks (1904); McGregor (1949); Mesa et al. (2009); Mitrofanov & Strunkova (1979); Tucker (1926); Womersley (1940)
* - original description