AnimaliaacceptedfamilyAccepted
Proctophyllodidae

Proctophyllodidae

Trouessart & Mégnin, 1884

GBIF:165417660

0year

ABOUT

Descriptions(5)

The Proctophyllodidae are a family of the Acarina (mite) order Astigmata. They contain many feather mites. The Alloptidae and Trouessartiidae were in earlier times included here as subfamilies. Proctophyllodidae females are extremely similar among species and sometimes even hard to assign to a genus, while males vary much more. Two subfamilies are generally recognized, the Proctophyllodinae and the Pterodectinae. The main difference is that the female pregenital apodeme and epimerites IV are separated, while in the latter they are connected and form a distinct structure.
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Feather mites (subclass Acarina, family Proctophyllodinae) are ectoparasites that live in between the barbs of feathers and are found on nearly every bird species currently described. It was previously believed that these mites had a parasitic relationship with their hosts but it is now thought that most species are more commensal with their hosts. Morphological studies have provided strong evidence for this with feather mite mouthparts being identified as unstructured for biting on solid material. Instead it is suggested that they feed on oils and fats secreted from the uropygial gland as well as pollen, fungus and dead epidermis tissue that is trapped within it.
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Feather mites are streamlined; strongly dorsoventrally flattened with short legs and well-developed ambulacra that act as a hold-fast organ. Being of the order Astigmata, they have biting mouhtparts with a very small gnathosoma compared to body size.
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Morphological constraints suggest that adult mites are nearly immobile. Transmission of mites has been shown to occur largely between direct interactions between parents and offspring and possibly during gregarious interactions between flock individuals. Observations of restricted species contamination on Falconiformes have supported this observation. Birds of prey have the greatest chance of cross contamination through interactions with their prey and yet have very stable acarofauna groups are found exclusively on those species. The European cuckoo, a brood parasite, has also been found to have their own species of mite even though the parents and offspring never interact (but see Lindholm et al., 1998)
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Proctophyllodinae

Allodectes Gaud & Berla, 1963 – tentatively placed here Anisophyllodes Atyeo, 1967 Bradyphyllodes Atyeo and Gaud, 1970 Diproctophyllodes Atyeo and Gaud, 1968 Favettea Trouessart, 1915 Hemipterodectes Berla, 1959 Joubertophyllodes Atyeo & Gaud, 1971 Monojoubertia Radford, 1950 Nycteridocaulus Atyeo, 1966 Philepittalges Atyeo, 1966 Proctophyllodes Robin, 1868 Ptyctophyllodes Atyeo, 1967 Tanyphyllodes Atyeo, 1966

Pterodectinae

Afroproterothrix Mironov & Wauthy, 2010 Amerodectes Valim & Hernandes, 2010 Anisodiscus Gaud & Mouchet, 1957 Dolichodectes Megalodectes Montesauria Oudemans, 1905 Neodectes Pedanodectes Proterothrix Gaud, 1968 Pterodectes Robin, 1877 – possibly not monophyletic Syntomodectes Toxerodectes Trochilodectes Xynonodectes
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CLASSIFICATION

Taxonomic Classification Tree

MULTIMEDIA

Media Files(1)

Amerodectes zonotrichiae female and male

Imageimage/jpeg© Llanos-Soto, S., Muñoz, B., Moreno, L., Landaeta-Aqueveque, C., Kinsella, J. M., Mironov, S., ... & González-Acuña, D.CC-BY-4.0http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1984-29612017000300314&lng=en&nrm=iso

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Occurrences with images

Source Information

English Wikipedia - Species Pages

checklist
Species pages extracted from the English Wikipedia article XML dump from 2022-08-02. Multimedia, vernacular names and textual descriptions are extracted, but only pages with a taxobox or speciesbox template are recognized. See https://github.com/mdoering/wikipedia-dwca for details.

Döring M (2022). English Wikipedia - Species Pages. Wikimedia Foundation. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/c3kkgh accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-14.

LicensePublished 8/2/2022View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
165417660
Dataset Key
cbb6498e-8927-405a-916b-576d00a6289b
Origin
source
Backbone Key
3252814
Taxon ID
15404000
Last Crawled
6/4/2026
Last Interpreted
6/4/2026