The Ricinidae are a family of a larger group Amblycera of the chewing lice. All species are relatively large bodied (relative to host size)[2] avian ectoparasites. They typically exhibit low prevalence (proportion of infested hosts)[3] and low intensity (number of parasites per infested hosts).[4] They feed on host blood which is atypical in chewing lice.[5] Two or three genera are recognized.
The genusTrochiliphagus (13 species) is very similar to the former one, considered to be identical with that by some authors,[8] but infest hummingbirds.
The genusTrochiloecetes (30 species) also parasitize hummingbirds, but – unlike the former genera – their infestations are usually restricted to the head and neck of the host.
The latter two genera constitute the most important members of hummingbirds' parasite fauna, although their ecology is poorly understood.[3]
^Bernard C. Nelson (1972): A Revision of the New World Species of Ricinus (Mallophaga). Occurring on Passeriformes (Aves), University of California Publications in Entomology Volume 68, University of California Press, Berkeley & Los Angeles, ISBN0-520-09412-3PDFArchived 2016-02-08 at the Wayback Machine
^G Rheinwald (2007): The position of Trochiliphagus Carriker within the Ricinidae (Insecta: Phthiraptera). Bonner Zoologische Beiträge 55, 37–46.