'' (Astigmata). Pollen grains visible. There are three possible
nymphal stages separated by molts: protonymph, deutonymph, and tritonymph. One of the stages may be either permanently or optionally suppressed, resulting in only two nymphal stages. Rarely, there is only one nymphal stage. Nymphal stages are suppressed in some
Trombidiformes (
Podapolipidae,
Tarsonemidae, and
Pyemotidae). A nymphal stage can be facultative, depending on particular circumstances.''''''
In bee-associated mites In bee-associated
Astigmata, deutonymphs are heteromorphic with respect to other stages and may also be polymorphic. There are two types of deutonymphs for these taxa: (1) phoretic deutonymph, an active and typically non-feeding stage serving for attachment and dispersal on insect hosts; and (2) non-phoretic (or immobile) deutonymph, a highly regressive, cyst-like stage serving for survival in adverse conditions. The phoretic deutonymph is a facultative stage; it only appears when there is a need for dispersal. Many bees only use nests for a single generation, so mites feeding on pollen inside those nests are doomed unless they can disperse to other nests that have adult bees. The life cycle of mites is therefore synchronized with that of their bee hosts, and the dispersal stage appears when adult bees are about to emerge and leave the nest, thus dispersing mites to new nests. In bee-associated mites, non-phoretic deutonymphs are known only in
Chaetodactylus and certain species of
Glycyphagus and
Acarus. In
Chaetodactylus, which is associated with solitary bees constructing nests only for a single generation/season, the deutonymphs remain in the nest cavity waiting for the nest to be re-used by other bees rather than dispersing.
Morphology Nymphs have four pairs of legs (for a total of eight) and lack functional external organs related to reproduction and oviposition. In some groups, the nymphal stages can only be distinguished by experts. In
Oribatida, different nymphal stages can be relatively easily identified by the number of
genital papillae: the protonymph has one pair, deutonymph two pairs, and tritonymph and adult three pairs. In Astigmata the protonymph has one pair of genital papillae, deutonymph two pairs, and tritonymph and adult two pairs. The deutonymph is phoretic and is very different from any other stage. It is easily identified by the presence of the attachment organ and the lack of functional mouthparts. A few taxa in the families
Chaetodactylidae,
Glycyphagidae, and
Acaridae have non-phoretic, immobile deutonymphs. This stage is a featureless sack with greatly reduced legs, attachment organ, and mouthparts, and it usually stays under the protonymphal skin. ==Adult==