Haller's organ

Haller's organ is a complex sensory organ possessed by ticks. Ticks, being an obligate parasites, must find a host in order to survive; via olfaction and the sensing of humidity, temperature, and carbon dioxide, Haller's organ detects them. Haller's organ is a minute cavity at the terminal segment of the first pair of a tick's legs (not the pedipalps). Each one is composed of a pit and a capsule, which contain sensory setae.

Haller's organ marked by arrows
magn.400x, microscope: Zeiss Axioscope, lens: Zeiss PlanNeofluar40

References

  • Anne Baker. "Taxonomy". Ixodes ricinus. Natural History Museum. Retrieved October 10, 2011.
  • G. H. F. Nuttall, W. F. Cooper & L. E. Robinson (1908). "On the structure of "Haller's organ" in the Ixodoidea". Parasitology. 1 (3): 238–242. doi:10.1017/S0031182000003486.
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