Usuario:MartinGala/Taller/Translations

De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre

Anatomía de los ácaros[editar]

(proviene de en-wiki)

Anatomy[editar]

External[editar]

Mites are tiny members of the class Arachnida; most are in the size range

{{convert|250|to|750|µm|in|2|abbr=on}}

but some are larger and some are no bigger than

{{convert|100|µm|in|3|abbr=on}}

as adults. The body plan has two

[[tagma (biology)|regions]]

, a cephalothorax (with no separate head) or prosoma, and an opisthosoma or abdomen. Segmentation has almost entirely been lost and the prosoma and opisthosoma are fused, only the positioning of the limbs indicating the location of the segments.[1]

1 Chelicerae, 2 Palps, 3 Salivary glands, 4 Gut, 5 Excretory (Malpighian) tubules, 6 Anus, 7 Ovary or testes, 8 Air-breathing tubes (tracheae), 9 Central ganglion, 10 Legs, 11 Hypostome.[2]

At the front of the body is the gnathosoma or capitulum. This is not a head and does not contain the eyes or the brain, but is a retractable feeding apparatus consisting of the chelicerae, the pedipalps and the oral cavity. It is covered above by an extension of the body carapace and is connected to the body by a flexible section of cuticle. The mouthparts differ between taxa depending on diet; in some species the appendages resemble legs while in others they are modified into chelicerae-like structures. The oral cavity connects posteriorly to the mouth and pharynx.[1]

Most mites have four pairs of legs, each with six segments, which may be modified for swimming or other purposes. The dorsal surface of the body is clad in hardened tergites and the ventral surface by hardened sclerites; sometimes these form transverse ridges. The gonopore (genital opening) is located on the ventral surface between the fourth pair of legs. Some species have one to five median or lateral eyes but many species are blind, and slit and pit sense organs are common. Both body and limbs bear setae (bristles) which may be simple, flattened, club-shaped or sensory. Mites are usually some shade of brown, but some species are red, orange, black or green, or some combination of these colours.[1]

Internal[editar]

Mite digestive systems have salivary glands that open into the preoral space rather than the foregut. Most species carry two to six pairs of salivary glands that empty at various points into the subcheliceral space.[3]​ A few mite species lack an anus: they do not defecate during their short lives.[4]​ The circulatory system consists of a network of sinuses and lacks a heart, movement of fluid being driven by the contraction of body muscles. Gas exchange is carried out across the body surface, but many species additionally have between one and four pairs of tracheae, the spiracles being located in the front half of the body. The excretory system includes a nephridium and one or two pairs of Malpighian tubules.[1]

Traducción[editar]

Espacio para la traducción



Referencias[editar]


  1. a b c d Error en la cita: Etiqueta <ref> no válida; no se ha definido el contenido de las referencias llamadas Ruppert
  2. «Bloodsucking Ticks - Vectors of Diseases of Man and Animals». Miscellaneous Publications of the Entomological Society of America 8: 161-376. 1972.  Parámetro desconocido |vauthors= ignorado (ayuda)
  3. «Ultrastructural investigations of the salivary glands in adults of the microtrombidiid mite Platytrombidium fasciatum (CL Koch, 1836)(Acariformes: Microtrombidiidae).». Arthropod Structure & Development 34 (1): 49-61. January 2005. doi:10.1016/j.asd.2004.09.001.  Parámetro desconocido |vauthors= ignorado (ayuda)
  4. «You Almost Certainly Have Mites On Your Face». National Geographic. 27 August 2014. Consultado el 23 November 2017.  Parámetro desconocido |vauthors= ignorado (ayuda)