生物
节肢动物口器
羽毛
白垩纪
昆虫学
化石记录
动物
古生物学
生态学
作者
Yanjie Zhang,Alexandr P. Rasnitsyn,Hai Zhang,Fan Song,Chungkun Shih,Dong Ren,Yongjie Wang,Hu Li,Taiping Gao
出处
期刊:Current Biology
[Elsevier]
日期:2024-02-01
卷期号:34 (4): 916-922.e1
被引量:7
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.cub.2024.01.027
摘要
Summary
Phthirapteran lice (true lice or parasitic lice) are a major group of ectoparasitic insects living on their bird or mammal hosts during their entire life cycle.1 Due to their highly specialized lifestyles, they are extremely poorly represented in fossil records.2 Molecular clock estimations have speculated extensively about the origin time of parasitic lice,3,4 yet none have been confirmed unequivocally. Herein, we report a new family of stem chewing lice, based on two adult insects associated with several semiplume feathers preserved within a piece of Kachin amber from the mid-Cretaceous. They display some defining characteristics of the Amblycera, an early-diverging lineage of the crown lice group. These features include a wingless body, chewing mouthparts, narrow and small thorax, and short tarsus with elongated euplantulae. Our phylogenetic analysis places the new taxa in the Amblycera, and the discovery thus pushes back the lice fossil records by at least 55 million years. Furthermore, the new specimens show primitive characters such as compressed and club-shaped terminal segments of antennae, maxillary and labial palps, and unmodified femora of hind legs, providing key information for the evolutionary relationship between free-living booklice and parasitic lice. This suggests that some ectoparasitic characters defining the crown lice group might have evolved among amblyceran and non-amblyceran lice in parallel. These newly described fossil specimens imply at least a Cretaceous age of Phthiraptera.
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