Demodex cyonis

Demodex cyonis is a species of Demodex mite first circumscribed in 2018 after being detected in the earwax of a dog with otitis externa in Saitama Prefecture, Japan, in July 2010.[1] It was determined to be a new species based on morphological characters including its opisthosoma length being shorter than one-half its body length, differentiating it from the other species in domestic dogs, D. canis and D. injai, and similar “short-bodied species” such as D. cornei. It is morphologically most similar to D. equi and D. acutipes.[1] The specific epithet cyonis is derived from the Greek word for domestic dog, κύων, the first observed host animal.[1]

Demodex cyonis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Trombidiformes
Family: Demodecidae
Genus: Demodex
Species:
D. cyonis
Binomial name
Demodex cyonis
Morita, Ohmi, Kiwaki, Ike & Nagata, 2018[1]

Life cycle

Most life stages of D. cyonis, including eggs, were found in earwax, whereas juvenile and adult mites were only detected in the outer ear during periods other than the peak infestation period, suggesting that the original habitat site of D. cyonis is the external auditory canal but it can expand to the outer skin in aggravated cases.[1]

References

  1. Tatsushi Morita, Aki Ohmi, Akihito Kiwaki, Kazunori Ike, and Katsuyuki Nagata. 2018. A New Stubby Species of Demodectic Mite (Acari: Demodicidae) from the Domestic Dog (Canidae), Journal of Medical Entomology, tjx226, https://doi.org/10.1093/jme/tjx226.
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