Oppiella nova (Oudemans, 1902)
- Dataset
- GBIF Backbone Taxonomy
- Rank
- SPECIES
- Published in
- Oribatid mites of Alpine Fennoscandia, Norw. J. Entomol. 57, 38-70.
Classification
- kingdom
- Animalia
- phylum
- Arthropoda
- class
- Arachnida
- order
- Sarcoptiformes
- family
- Oppiidae
- genus
- Oppiella
- species
- Oppiella nova
Name
- Synonyms
- Damaeosoma corrugatum Berlese, 1904
- Eremaeus novus Oudemans, 1902
- Notaspis sculptis Warburton & Pearce, 1905
- Oppia nova (Oudemanns, 1902)
- Homonyms
- Oppiella nova (Oudemans, 1902)
- Common names
- Mite in English
Bibliographic References
- Alendal, E., Andersen, T. and FjeldsÂ, A. (1980) New records of Apamea maillardi (Geyer, 1932) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) in Adventdalen, Spitsbergen. Fauna Nor. Ser. B 27, 78.
- Bayartogtokh, B., Schatz, H. and Ekrem, T. 2011. Distribution and diversity of the soil mites of Svalbard with redescriptions of three known species (Acari: Oribatida). J. Internat. Acarol. 37;467-484.
- Behan-Pelletier, Valerie M., and Zoë Lindo, 2019: Checklist of oribatid mites (Acari: Oribatida) of Canada and Alaska. Zootaxa, vol. 4666, no. 1. 1-180.
- Coulson, S.J., Fjellberg, A., Gwiazdowicz, D.J., Lebedeva, N.V., Melekhina, E.N., Solh¯y, T., ErsÈus, C., Maraldo, K., Miko, L., Schatz, H., Schmelz, R.M., S¯li, G. and Stur, E. 2013. The invertebrate fauna of anthropogenic soils in the High Arctic settlement of Barentsburg; Svalbard. Polar Res. 32;19273, http://dx.doi.org/10.3402/polar.v32i0.19273
- Coulson, S.J., Fjellberg, A., Melekhina, E.N., Taskaeva, A.A., Lebedeva, N.V., Belkina, O.A., Seniczak, S., Seniczak, A. & Gwiazdowicz, D.J. (2015) Microarthropod communities of industrially disturbed or imported soils in the High Arctic; the abandoned coal mining town of Pyramiden, Svalbard. Biodiversity and Conservation, 24 (7), 1671ñ1690. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10531-015-0885-9
- Coulson, S.J., Hodkinson, I.D. and Webb, N.R. 2003. Microscale distribution patterns in high Arctic soil microarthropod communities: the influence of plant species within the vegetation mosaic. Ecography, 26, 801-809.
- Coulson, S.J., Leinaas, H.P., Ims, R.A. and S¯vik, G. 2000. Experimental manipulation of the winter surface ice layer: the effects on a High Arctic soil microarthropod community. Ecography 23, 299ñ306.
- Dollery, R., Hodkinson, I.D. and JÛnsdÛttir, I.S. 2006. Impact of warming and timing of snow melt on soil microarthropod assemblages associated with Dryas -dominated plant communities on Svalbard. Ecography, 29, 111-119.
- Hodkinson, I.D. 2005. Adaptations of invertebrates to terrestrial Arctic environments. Trans. Roy. Norw. Soc. Sci. Lett. 2005, 1-44.
- Hodkinson, I.D., Coulson, S.J. and Webb, N.R. 2004. Invertebrate community assembly along proglacial chronosequences in the high Arctic. J. Anim. Ecol. 73, 556-568.
- Holm, ≈. 1959. Notes on Arctic spiders. Ark. Zool. 12, 511ñ515.
- Karppinen, E. 1967. Notes on the arthropod fauna of Spitsbergen. Data on the Oribatids (Acari) from Spitsbergen. Ann. Entomol. Fenn. 33, 18ñ26.
- Karppinen, E. and Krivolutsky, D. A. 1982 List of oribatid mites (Acarina, Oribatei) of the northern paleoarctic region. I. Europe. Acta Entomol. Fenn. 41, 1ñ18.
- Lebedeva, N.V. and Krivolutsky, D.A. 2003. Birds spread soil microarthropods to Arctic Islands. Dokl. Biol. Sci. 391, 392-332.
- Lebedeva, N.V. and Lebedev, V.D. 2008. Transport of oribatid mites to the polar areas by birds. Int. Acarol. 359-367.
- Lebedeva, N.V., Lebedev, V.D. and Lelekhina, E.N. 2006. New data on the oribatid mite (Oribatei) fauna of Svalbard. Dokl Biol. Sci. 407, 182-186.
- MacFadyen, A. 1954. The invertebrate fauna of Jan Mayen Island (East Greenland). J. Anim. Ecol. 23, 261ñ297.
- Marshall, Valin G., R. Marcel Reeves, and Roy A. Norton, 1987: Catalogue of the Oribatida (Acari) of Continental United States and Canada. Memoirs of the Entomological Society of Canada, vol. 119, no. 139. i + 418.
- Nishida (2002), http://hbs.bishopmuseum.org/pdf/tr22.pdf
- Remén, Persson, Finlay & Ahlström (2015-10-12 22:00:00) Responses of oribatid mites to tree girdling and nutrient addition in boreal coniferous forests.