Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gxg78 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T07:31:27.561Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Cheyletiella parasitivorax (Acarina: Trombidoidea) as a parasitic mite in Britain

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

W. N. Beesley
Affiliation:
Central Veterinary Laboratory, Weybridge, Surrey

Extract

Since its discovery in France by Mégnin (1878), Cheyletiella parasitivorax has been found in many countries—on rabbits (Oudemans, 1906; Pillars, 1925; Ford, 1944; Mykytowycz, 1957a; Womersley, 1941), on the dog (Humphreys, 1958), fox (Kuscher, 1940), cat (Niggli & Teuscher, 1959; Davies, 1941), man (Olsen & Roth, 1947) and even in phoretic association with fleas (Cooper, 1946). Hirst (1917) was the first to find the species in Britain and there have been several more recent records from this country.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1963

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Banks, N. (1915). The Acarina or mites. U.S. Dept. Agric. Rept. No. 108, p. 28.Google Scholar
Barr, A. R. (1955). A case of ‘mange’ of the domestic rabbit due to Cheyletiella parasitivorax. J. Parasit. 41, 323.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooper, K. W. (1946). The occurrence of the mite Cheyletiella parasitivorax (Mégnin) in North America, with notes on its synonymy and ‘parasitic’ habit. J. Parasit. 32, 480–2.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Davies, J. H. T. (1941). Cat itch: Cheyletiella and Notoedrus compared. Brit. J. Derm. 53, 1824.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ford, C. M. (1944). A non-parasitic mite in rabbit's fur. Vet. Rec. 56, 115.Google Scholar
Hart, C. B. & Malone, J. C. (1958). The occurrence of the rabbit fur-mite, Cheyletiella parasitivorax (Mégnin), on the dog. Vet. Rec. 70, 991–3.Google Scholar
Hirst, S. (1917). On the occurrence of a pseudoparasitic mite (Cheyletiella parasitivorax) on the domestic cat. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (series 8), 20, 132–3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Humphreys, M. (1958). Cheyletiella parasitivorax infestation of the dog, Vet. Rec. 70, 442.Google Scholar
Kral, F. & Uscavage, J. P. (1961). Cheyletiella parasitivorax infestation in a dog. J. Small Anim. Pract. 1, 277–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuscher, A. (1940). Raubmilben beim Hund. Wien tierärztl. Mschr. 27, 1016.Google Scholar
Mégnin, P. (1878). Mémoire sur les Cheylétides parasites. J. Anat., Paris, 14, 416–41.Google Scholar
Mukytowycz, R. (1957 a). Ectoparasites of the wild rabbit. Oryctolagus cuniculus. C.S.I.R.O. Wild life Res. 2, 63–5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mukytowycz, R. (1957 b). Parasitic habit of the rabbit mite, Cheyletiella parasitivorax (Mégnin). C.S.I.R.O. Wild life Res. 2, 164.Google Scholar
Niggli, H. B., & Teuscher, E. (1959). Raubmilben (Cheyletiella parasitivorax) als akzidentelle Hautparasiten bei des Katz. Schweiz. Arch. Tierheilk. 101, 107–12.Google Scholar
Olsen, S. J. & Roth, H. (1947). On the mite Cheyletiella parasitivorax, occurring on cats, as a facultative parasite of man. J. Parasit. 33, 444–5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oudemans, A. C. (1906). Révision des Chélétinés. Mém. Soc. zool. Fr. 19, 36144.Google Scholar
Pillars, A. W. N. (1925). Cheiletiella parasitivorax Mégnin, causing lesions in the domestic rabbit. Vet. J. 81, 96–7.Google Scholar
Schaffer, M. H., Baker, N. F. & Kennedy, P. C. (1958). Parasitism by Cheyletiella parasitivorax. A case report of the infestation in a female dog and its litter. Cornell Vet. 48, 440–7.Google Scholar
Sprehn, C. (1956). Raubmilbenräude durch Befall mit Cheyletiella parasitivorax (Mégnin 1878), Cheyletidae—Acari, beim Silberfuchs, und eine durch diese Milben verursachte essentielle Dermatitis beim Kaninchen. Mh. Vet. Med. 11, 256–8.Google Scholar
Womersley, H. (1941). Notes on the Cheyletidae (Acarina, Trombiboidea) of Australia and New Zealand, with descriptions of new species. Rec. S. Aust. Mus. 7, 5164.Google Scholar