Open Access
How to translate text using browser tools
1 January 1980 POPULATIONS, MICROHABITAT PREFERENCE AND EFFECTS OF INFESTATION OF TWO SPECIES OF Orthohalarachne (HALARACHNIDAE: ACARINA) IN THE NORTHERN FUR SEAL
KE CHUNG KIM, VERDA L. HAAS
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

All of 116 northern fur seals examined, except black pups (up to 3 months old), had nasal mites, Orthohalarachne attenuata and O. diminuata, with the mean density of 1,808 mites per subadult male, 435 per adult female, 251 per silver pup, and 21.5 per black pup. Only 63% of black pups examined were infested with both mites. Larvae represented as much as 99% of the total mite population (total samples), and the females of both species of Orthohalarachne accounted for more than 90% of the total population of adult mites. The O. attenuata adults inhabited the nasopharynx and O. diminuata adults were found primarily in the lungs. Larvae of both species occupied the mucus-filled turbinates. The heavy infestation with these mites appeared to result in impairment of respiration in fur seals, and could also cause lesions in the lungs and secondary alveolar emphysems, predispose to more serious diseases, or even kill the host animal.

KIM, HAAS, and KEYES: POPULATIONS, MICROHABITAT PREFERENCE AND EFFECTS OF INFESTATION OF TWO SPECIES OF Orthohalarachne (HALARACHNIDAE: ACARINA) IN THE NORTHERN FUR SEAL1
KE CHUNG KIM and VERDA L. HAAS "POPULATIONS, MICROHABITAT PREFERENCE AND EFFECTS OF INFESTATION OF TWO SPECIES OF Orthohalarachne (HALARACHNIDAE: ACARINA) IN THE NORTHERN FUR SEAL," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 16(1), 45-51, (1 January 1980). https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-16.1.45
Received: 5 February 1979; Published: 1 January 1980
Back to Top