Primicimex

Primicimex is a monotypic genus of ectoparasitic bed bugs in the family Cimicidae, the only species being Primicimex cavernis,[1][2][3] which is both the largest cimicid, and the most primitive one. It feeds on bats and was known only from Ney Cave in Medina County, Texas,[4] but has since been found in a cave near Chocoyos, Chimaltenango, Guatemala.[5]

Primicimex
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hemiptera
Family: Cimicidae
Genus: Primicimex
Barber, 1941
Species:
P. cavernis
Binomial name
Primicimex cavernis
Barber, 1941
Synonyms
  • Primicimex caverna Barber, 1941

Description

Like all cimicids, Primicimex cavernis is small, flat and oval-shaped, becoming plumper after feeding. It is unable to fly and has beak-like mouthparts with which it pierces the skin and sucks the blood of its host.[6] It differs from other cimicids (except Bucimex chilensis) in having claws and a row of erect, peg-like spines on the tarsus and has been observed using these structures to cling onto the bat's pelage.[7]

Ecology

Primicimex cavernis and its nearest relative, Bucimex chilensis, are the only members of the cimicid subfamily Primicimicinae. Their hosts are exclusively bats; in the case of P. cavernis, this is the Mexican free-tailed bat (Tadarida brasiliensis), although the ghost-faced bat (Mormoops megalophylla), which roosts in the same cave, may act as a secondary host.[7] Ney Cave is a limestone cave in semiarid savannah grassland with oak (Quercus), mesquite (Prosopis) and grasses. The cave is a seasonal roost used by the bats as nursery quarters, and at dusk during the summer, upward of 400,000 bats may stream out of the cave entrance to forage for insects, returning to the roost before dawn. The young are mostly born in June and remain in the roost until able to fly, at about 40 days of age.[8] Cimicids have the ability to survive for long periods without feeding, and this allows Primicimex cavernis to hide in crevices, awaiting the return of their hosts from their over-wintering sites.[7]

Like other cimicids, Primicimex cavernis feeds exclusively on blood. It is exceptional within the family in that insemination takes place through the reproductive tract, while in all other species, traumatic insemination occurs, with the sperm being injected through the body wall.[9]

References

  1. "Primicimex Report". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 2019-09-24.
  2. "Primicimex". GBIF. Retrieved 2019-09-24.
  3. Usinger, Robert Leslie (1966). Monograph of Cimicidae (Hemiptera, Heteroptera) (PDF). Entomological Society of America. pp. 294–295. (39 MB)
  4. Usinger, Robert Leslie (1972). Robert Leslie Usinger: Autobiography of an Entomologist. Pacific Coast Entomological Society, California Academy of Sciences. p. 237.
  5. Jones, Susan C. & Jordan, Kyle K. "Bat Bugs" (PDF). Ohio State University Extension Fact Sheet. Ohio State University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 March 2017. Retrieved 15 February 2020.
  6. Ossa, Gonzalo; Johnson, Joseph S.; Puisto, Anna I. E.; Rinne, Veikko; Sääksjärvi, Ilari E.; Waag, Austin; Vesterinen, Eero J. & Lilley, Thomas M. (February 2019). "The Klingon batbugs: Morphological adaptations in the primitive bat bugs, Bucimex chilensis and Primicimex cavernis, including updated phylogeny of Cimicidae". Ecology and Evolution. 9 (4): 1736–1749. doi:10.1002/ece3.4846. PMC 6392402. PMID 30847069.
  7. Reichard, Jonathan D.; Gonzales, Lauren E.; Casey, Caitlin M.; Allen, Louise C.; Hristov, Nickolay I. & Kunz, Thomas H. (2009). "Evening emergence behavior and seasonal dynamics in large colonies of Brazilian free-tailed bats". Journal of Mammalogy. 90 (6): 1478–1486. doi:10.1644/08-MAMM-A-266R1.1.
  8. Reinhardt, Klaus & Siva-Jothy, Michael T. (Jan 2007). "Biology of the bed bugs (Cimicidae)" (PDF). Annual Review of Entomology. 52: 351–374. doi:10.1146/annurev.ento.52.040306.133913. PMID 16968204. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 26 May 2010.

Further reading

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