Demodex injai

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Demodex injai
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Trombidiformes
Family: Demodecidae
Genus: Demodex
Species:
D. injai
Binomial name
Demodex injai
Desch & Hillier, 2003

Demodex injai is a species of parasitic mite of the genus Demodex that infests hair follicles of mammals of the genus Canis. In veterinary medicine, the species has been the subject of study due to being one of the primary parasites known to cause red mange, a common skin disease among domestic dogs.

D. injai was first described during a 1997 study by Clifford Desch and Andrew Hillier of specimens collected from a Scottish Terrier, and was at that point assumed to be a subspecies of D. canis. In 2003, it was first proposed by Desch and Hillier that D. injai was a separate species.[1] This classification was based solely on morphology and conjecture until genetic sequencing in 2012 confirmed that D. injai was a fully distinct species.[2]

Description

Ecology

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