Trombiculidae (), commonly referred to in North America as chiggers and in Britain as harvest mites, and also known as berry bugs, bush-mites, red bugs or scrub-itch mites, are a family of mites. Chiggers are often confused with jiggers, a type of flea. In their larval stage several species of Trombiculidae bite animal hosts to feed on their skin. To do so they embed their mouthparts into the skin, causing irritation. Humans can be hosts.
chigger mites
FAMILY
恙蟎科(學名:Trombiculidae;(/trɒmbᵻˈkjuːlᵻdiː/)是蛛形綱蜱蟎亞綱蟎形總目恙蟎目(Catalogue of Life作前氣門目)恙蟎總科之下的一個科,常見於農作物。這些物種的幼蟲階段經常都咬其宿主,造成過敏反應及皮膚炎。
via GBIF
Trombiculidae (), commonly referred to in North America as chiggers and in Britain as harvest mites, and also known as berry bugs, bush-mites, red bugs or scrub-itch mites, are a family of mites. Chiggers are often confused with jiggers, a type of flea. In their larval stage several species of Trombiculidae bite animal hosts to feed on their skin. To do so they embed their mouthparts into the skin, causing irritation. Humans can be hosts.
Trombiculidae live in forests and grasslands and are often found in the vegetation of low, damp areas such as berry bushes, orchards, along lakes and streams, as well as drier places where vegetation is low, such as lawns, golf courses, and parks. They are most numerous in early summer when grass, weeds, and other vegetation is heaviest. They are relatives of ticks and are nearly microscopic, measuring 400 μm (1/60 of an inch) and have a chrome-orange hue. There is a constriction in the front part of the body in the nymph and adult stages. The best known species of chigger in North America is the hard-biting Trombicula alfreddugesi of the Southeastern United States, humid Midwest and Mexico. In the UK, the most prevalent harvest mite is Neotrombicula autumnalis, which is distributed through Western Europe to Eastern Asia.
via PubMed
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).