ABSTRACT
Egg deposition in the soil mite Holaspulus tenuipes (Berlese, 1904) was observed with the use of continuous video-monitoring. The process was found to consist of four distinct phases. In Phase 1, the species performed pre-ovipositional activity prior to the egg being extruded from the genital opening. Phase 1 lasted approximately 7.5 min. Phase 2 involved egg extrusion followed with holding of the egg beneath the gnathosoma and lasted approximately 6.5 min. Egg deposition that occurs in Phase 3 lasted 10 sec. on average. Phase 4 involves covering the egg with substrate particles, the longest part of oviposition which lasted approximately 18 min. The egg possesses lamellar exochorion and two processes, one on each of the egg apexes. The average time of egg incubation was 3 days and 21 h. The hatching lasted 1 min. 43 sec. on average, the egg splitting was longitudinal and larva moved backward during hatch.
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank Dr Bruce Halliday (CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences, Australian National Insect Collection, Canberra, Australia) for the verification of species identification and help with access to Parholaspididae publications. We also thank the anonymous reviewers for kind and helpful suggestions that considerably improved the scientific value of this paper as well as the IJA Editorial Board for the professional cooperation throughout the publication process.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Supplementary material
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