24. Hyperlaelaps microti (Ewing, 1933)

Tetragonyssus microti Ewing, 1933: 9, pl. 3, figs 3, 4.

Hyperlaelaps arvalis . — Bregetova, 1953: 314; Bregetova, 1956: 117, figs 229, 231, 232; Goncharova, 1956: 203; Vysotskaya & Bregetova, 1957: 14; Goncharova & Buyakova, 1964: 280, figs 2, 5; Zuevsky, 1968: 1245, figs 1, 3, 5, 7; Senotrusova, 1987: 178; Goncharova et al., 1991: 39.

Hyperlaelaps microti . — Evans & Till, 1966: 141, figs 6 A, B, 7 A–C; Karg, 1971: 182, fig. 197a, b; Evans & Till, 1979: 236, fig. h; Mašán & Fenďa, 2010: 52, figs 36, 37, 40.

Laelaps arvalis Zakhvatkin, 1948: 74, figs 25, 26.

Laelaps arvalis . — Lange, 1955: 334, figs 690–692; Lange, 1958: 206, pl. LXXIV, A; Strandtmann & Wharton, 1958: 60.

Laelaps kochi Tipton, 1960: 272, figs 25e, 27a, 28g, 32b, 33g, 38b, 39 a, b.

Laelaps pachypus C.L. Koch, 1838: 8, textfig., non Hermann, 1804.

Laelaps pachypus . — Oudemans, 1927: 179, figs 25–48, non Hermann, 1804; Willmann, 1952: 397; Strandtmann & Wharton, 1958: 67; Costa, 1961: 43, figs 70–74, partim.

Type locality. USA, California, Los Angeles.

Type host. Microtus californicus Merriam, 1880 .

Principal hosts. Voles of the genus Microtus (Evans & Till, 1966) .

Distribution. Holarctic (North America, northern Eurasia). Widely distributed throughout Asiatic Russia (Nikulina, 2004).