Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2014
Adult mites, like ticks, have eight legs and therefore are not insects. They can be distinguished from ticks by the absence of teeth on the hypostome of the mouthparts and in having setae (bristles) on the body as well as the legs. But the principal medically important species (scabies mite, scrub typhus mite, house-dust mite and follicle mite) can most readily be recognized by their characteristic shapes.
Sarcoptes scabiei, the scabies or itch mite, occurs on people worldwide. Morphologically they are inseparable from S. scabiei infesting wild and domesticated animals, including dogs, horses and pigs. Mites on such animals are considered to be the same species as those infecting people but physiologically adapted for life on non-human hosts. In animals they cause the condition known as mange. Mites living on animals very rarely infect humans, but if they do the infection can persist for several weeks.
Scabies mites are not vectors of any disease but cause conditions known as scabies, acariasis, and crusted or Norwegian scabies.
External morphology
The female mite (0.30–0.45 mm) is just visible without the aid of a hand lens. It is pale and disc-shaped. Dorsally the mite is covered with numerous small peg-like spines and a few bristles (setae), and both dorsally and ventrally there are series of lines across the body giving the mite a striated appearance (Fig. 18.1, Plate 23). Adults have four pairs of short and cylindrical legs divided into five ring-like segments.
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