| Literature DB >> 31875091 |
Olavi Kurina1, Heli Kirik1, Heino Õunap2, Erki Õunap1,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Deer keds are obligatory haematophagous parasites of large homeothermic animals, particularly cervids. Two of the five known species occurring in Europe-Lipoptena cervi (Linnaeus) and L. fortisetosa Maa-are known to have a relatively wide distribution. Lipoptena fortisetosa is considered to have been introduced into Europe with sika deer from the Eastern Palaearctic and is continuously expanding its range. Little is known about the medical importance of deer keds, but they can cause hair loss in cervids and are suspected to be vectors of several diseases. NEW INFORMATION: Details of the distribution of Lipoptena fortisetosa in Europe, including its northernmost record, are provided. This species has been shown to have a viable population in Southern Estonia. Furthermore, the differences from allied L. cervi are discussed, based on morphological and molecular characters. Olavi Kurina, Heli Kirik, Heino Õunap, Erki Õunap.Entities:
Keywords: Diptera ; Hippoboscidae ; DNA barcode; deer keds; distribution; range expansion
Year: 2019 PMID: 31875091 PMCID: PMC6925061 DOI: 10.3897/BDJ.7.e47857
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biodivers Data J ISSN: 1314-2828
Figure 1.Distribution of in Europe, with year of the earliest known specimen for each particular country. Asterisk indicates a year of published reference without collected/observed specimen(s) data known. A dot on the map can represent several nearby records. The source references are: 1 – Germany (Schumann and Messner 1993, GBIF 2019), 2 – Switzerland (Büttiker 1994), 3 – Italy (Andreani et al. 2019), 4 – Poland (Borowiec and Zatwarnicki 1989, Kowal et al. 2009), 5 – Czech Republic (Theodor 1967, Sychra 2009), 6 – Slovak Republic (Oboňa et al. 2019), 7 – Austria (Schedl 2017, Schedl 2018), 8 – Romania (Pârvu 2005, Mihalca et al. 2019), 9 – Moldova (Metelitsa and Veselkin 1989), 10 – Lithuania (Dumčius and Pakalniškis 2005), 11 – Belarus (Ostrovsky 2017), 12 – Moscow district in Russia (Grunin 1970), 13 – Estonia (original data: letters correspond to the collecting localities in the Material section).
Figure 2.Habitus of females of (A) and (B).
Figure 3.Dorsal view of the female thorax of (A) and (B).