Tyrophagus putrescentiae was
first described by
Franz von Paula Schrank in 1781, under the name
Acarus putrescentiae. This original description covered both a mite and a
springtail, collected from garden soil,
flower pots and rotting leaves at an undisclosed location in the
Austrian Empire, and provided too little information for the mite to be confidently assigned to any family. In 1906,
Anthonie Cornelis Oudemans treated
A. putrescentiae as a species "indeterminabilia", but designated it as the
type species of his new subgenus
Tyrophagus. and designated a
neotype of
T. putrescentiae from Oudemans' collections. The
International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature approved an application to place
T. putrescentiae on its official list of approved names. In 2007, it was discovered that Robertson's concept of the species in fact covered animals belonging to two distinct species, and that the
T. putrescentiae had been chosen from the much rarer species. A petition has been made to the Commission to stabilise usage by applying the name
T. putrescentiae to the common species; the rare species would then be known as
T. fanetzhangorum. ==References==