Revisiting the systematics of Brevipalpus flat mites (Tenuipalpidae): phylogeny, species groups and cryptic diversity
Renata Santos de Mendon\c{c}a (PNPD/CAPES, UnB, CENARGEN), Francisco Ferragut (UPV, IAM), Isis Carolina S. de Oliveira (UnB, CENARGEN), Aline Daniele Tassi (ESALQ, UF), Felipe Fileni, Ronald Ochoa, Denise Navia (UMR CBGP)

TL;DR
This study used phylogenetic analysis combining DNA and morphological data to revise Brevipalpus mite classification, revealing cryptic species, polyphyletic groups, and ongoing speciation processes, improving understanding of their evolution and pest management.
Contribution
It provides a revised classification of Brevipalpus mites based on genetic lineages, identifying cryptic diversity and proposing a new species grouping aligned with phylogenetic data.
Findings
Current species groups are only partially consistent with genetic lineages.
Cryptic species were confirmed across multiple methods.
Host-associated lineages suggest ongoing speciation.
Abstract
Phytophagous mites in the genus Brevipalpus (Tenuipalpidae) can be major pests, causing direct damage to their host plants or vectoring viruses. However, a phylogeny-based classification to understand their evolution and predict their bioecological aspects is lacking. Accurate species identification is crucial for studying pathosystem interactions, implementing quarantine measures, and developing control strategies. This study revisited the classification of Brevipalpus based on phylogenetic relationships, identifying cryptic species and determining genetic distance boundaries. A multi-tool exploration of DNA datasets, including mitochondrial (two COI regions) and nuclear (ITS2 and D1-D3) data combined with a detailed morphological study using light and scanning microscopy, was performed. Specimens were collected from 20 host plant families from South America, Europe, and the Middle…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsStudy of Mite Species · Insect-Plant Interactions and Control
