Oribatid Mites Supply Tetrodotoxin to Poisonous Newts

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Abstract

Tetrodotoxin (TTX) is a potent neurotoxin widely distributed among marine and terrestrial animals, yet how terrestrial vertebrates acquire this toxin has been debated for decades. Here, we identify oribatid mites as the primary dietary sources of TTX for the Japanese fire-bellied newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster . We detect TTX and its analogs in the mites Scheloribates processus and Galumna sp. KM1, which are preferentially consumed by terrestrial newts. In a controlled toxification experiment, juvenile newts accumulated TTX after consuming TTX-bearing mites, directly demonstrating dietary sequestration. Our results demonstrate that the early terrestrial stage is critical for lifelong TTX acquisition in newts. Notably, we also detect pumiliotoxin, a poison-frog alkaloid, in S. processus , suggesting that newts and poison frogs have convergently evolved to exploit toxin-bearing microarthropods for chemical defense. We propose a “terrestrial toxic web” hypothesis in which oribatid mites act as a shared environmental reservoir linking putative microbial toxin production to vertebrate chemical defense, highlighting microarthropods as key mediators in terrestrial toxin flow.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00