Amblyseius largoensis | |
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Mesostigmata |
Family: | Phytoseiidae |
Genus: | Amblyseius |
Species: | A. largoensis |
Binomial name | |
Amblyseius largoensis (Muma, 1955) | |
Synonyms [1] | |
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Amblyseius largoensis is a species of mite in the family Phytoseiidae. It is found in Europe. [1] It is known to feed on Raoiella indica eggs. A. largoensis completes its immature stage in less than a week. [2]
The Phytoseiidae are a family of mites which feed on thrips and other mite species. They are often used as a biological control agent for managing mite pests. Because of their usefulness as biological control agents, interest in Phytoseiidae has steadily increased over the past century. Public awareness of the biological control potential of invertebrates has been growing, though mainly in the US and Europe. In 1950, there were 34 known species. Today, there are 2,731 documented species organized in 90 genera and three subfamilies.
Amblyseius is a large genus of predatory mites belonging to the family Phytoseiidae. Many members of this genus feed on other mites such as red spider mites, and also on thrips. Several species are popular as biological control agents to control these pests.
Amblyseius orientalis is a species of predatory mite belonging to the family Phytoseiidae. This oval, greyish white mite is very small; the female is around 380 μm in length and the male is even smaller at around 280 μm. Both sexes are notable for the very long setae on the margins of the body and on the fourth pair of legs. As with many of these often confusingly similar mites, the shape of the sclerotized body shields is important in identification.
Raoiella indica, commonly known as the red palm mite, is a species of mite belonging to the family Tenuipalpidae. A pest of several species of palm in the Middle East and South East Asia, it is now becoming established throughout the Caribbean. The invasion of this species is the biggest mite explosion ever observed in the Americas.
Raoiella is a genus of mite belonging to the family Tenuipalpidae.
Tenuipalpidae, also called flat mites or false spider mites, are a family of mites, closely related to the Tetranychidae. They are reddish and slow-moving and normally feed near the midrib or veins on the underside of leaves. Several species, among them Raoiella indica, are important crop pests. Other common species include Acaricis urigersoni and the Brevipalpus species B. phoenicis, B. californicus, B. obovatus, and B. lewisi.
Amblyseius acalyphus is a species of mite in the family Phytoseiidae.
Amblyseius andersoni is a species of mite in the family Phytoseiidae. It is found in Europe.
Amblyseius animos is a species of mite in the Phytoseiidae family. It was described by A.S. Khan, M. Afzal and Shamshad Akbar in 2000, and is known from Pakistan.
Amblyseius bahiensis is a species of mite in the family Phytoseiidae.
Amblyseius bellatulus is a species of mite in the Phytoseiidae family that is native to Taiwan. It was described by Tseng Yi-Hsiung in 1983. Following his retirement, Tseng's collection of more than 20 holotypes of Taiwanese phytoseiid fauna were lost. A. Bellatulus re-described in 2017 by a team from National Taiwan University led by Liao Jhih-Rong, who collected new specimens of phytoseiid mites from the original locale used by Tseng as well as other areas throughout Taiwan.
Amblyseius igarassuensis is a species of mite in the family Phytoseiidae.
Amblyseius tamatavensis is a species of mite in the family Phytoseiidae.
Amblyseius wuyiensis is a species of mite in the family Phytoseiidae.
Euseius inouei is a species of mite in the family Phytoseiidae originally observed by Shozo Ehara and Gilberto Moraes in Uruguay in 1998. It is named in honor of Dr. Kouichi Inoue of the Instituto Nacional de Investigacion Agropecuaria (INIA) located within Colonia Gestido in the Salto Grande, Uruguay.
Neoseiulus californicus is a predatory mite that feeds on Tetranychid mites. This species was first described on lemons from California under the name Typhlodromus californicus in 1954.
Neoseiulus cucumeris, the cucumeris mite, is a species of predatory mite in the family Phytoseiidae. It is used in biological pest control of western flower thrips in cucumber and some other greenhouse crops.
Musa coccinea, commonly known as scarlet banana or red-flowering banana, is a species of flowering plant in the banana and plantain family Musaceae, native to tropical China and Vietnam. It is a bat-pollinated evergreen perennial, placed in section Callimusa, having a diploid chromosome number of 2n = 20.
Typhlodromips swirskii, the Swirski mite, is a species of predatory mite in the family Phytoseiidae. It is used in biological pest control of western flower thrips in greenhouse or indoor grown crops.