New Transitional Fleas from China Highlighting Diversity of Early Cretaceous Ectoparasitic Insects
Fleas are a group of highly specialized blood-feeding ectoparasites whose early evolutionary history is poorly known [1, 2]. Although several recent discoveries have shed new light on the origin of the group [3, 4], a considerable gap exists between stem fleas and crown fleas. Here we report a new t...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Current biology 2013-07, Vol.23 (13), p.1261-1266 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Fleas are a group of highly specialized blood-feeding ectoparasites whose early evolutionary history is poorly known [1, 2]. Although several recent discoveries have shed new light on the origin of the group [3, 4], a considerable gap exists between stem fleas and crown fleas. Here we report a new transitional flea, Saurophthirus exquisitus sp. nov., assigned to a new family Saurophthiridae fam. nov., from the Lower Cretaceous Yixian Formation of northeastern China. Saurophthirids are more similar to crown fleas than other stem fleas in having a relatively small body size, relatively short and slender piercing-sucking stylet mouthparts, comparably short and compact antennae, rows of short and stiff bristles on the thorax, and highly elongated legs. The new finding greatly improves our understanding of the morphological transition to the highly specialized body plan of extant fleas. However, saurophthirids also display several features unknown in other fleas, and some of these features are suggestive of a possible ectoparasitic relationship to contemporaneous pterosaurs, though other possibilities exist. The new fossils, in conjunction with previous discoveries, highlight a broad diversity of ectoparasitic insects in the mid-Mesozoic.
•New fossil fleas are described from the Early Cretaceous (125 Mya) of China•New findings fill the transitional gap from earliest stem fleas to extant fleas•The ectoparasites might have lived on and sucked blood of coeval pterosaurs•New fleas highlight the diversity of ectoparasitic insects in the mid-Mesozoic |
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ISSN: | 0960-9822 1879-0445 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.cub.2013.05.040 |