Monograph
Zootaxa
3663 (1): 001–102 (22 May 2013)
Hotspots of new species
discovery: new mite species described during 2007 to 2012
DONG LIU, TIAN-CI YI, YUN XU & ZHI-QIANG ZHANG
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Abstract
The type localities of new mite species described in two
journals (Systematic & Applied Acarology and Zootaxa) during
the last six years (2007–2012) were surveyed to detect hotspots of new mite
species discovery. Among the 642 papers examined, 71% of them contain new
species, with 148 new species in 2007, 20 7
in 2008, 234 in 2009, 208 in 2010, 333 in 2011 and 249 in 2012. Systematic
& Applied Acarology published about 3% of the total new species indexed
by Zoological Record during 2007–2012, whereas Zootaxa
published about 35% of the total. The 1379
new species are distributed unevenly among 150 mite families; the top 15
families accounted for 55% of all the species, and 86 of the 150 families have 1–3
species each. The top family is the Eriophyidae, which alone accounted for
nearly 15% of the total new species. Geographically, the new species were
described from 92 countries and their distribution among these countries is
highly uneven. The top 10 countries accounted for 62% of all the new species and
the top country, China, alone accounted for 18% of the total. The average number
of new species per country is 15 and no more than a fifth of the countries are
above the average, and 40% of the countries have only 1–3 new species each.
The top country for each continent is China (248 species) for Asia, Australia
(166 species) for Oceania, Brazil (76 species) for South America, Kenya (51
species) for Africa, USA (51 species) for North America and Russia (42 species)
for Europe. Increased efforts in discovering and describing new species are much
needed for biodiversity-rich countries in South America, Southeast Asia and
Africa.
Key words: Acari, new species, biodiversity, hotspots,
taxonomy, mites, type locality, type depository
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