Links  |Sitemap  |  Contact  |  Home  |  中文   |  CAS
 HomeAbout UsResearchScientistsInt`l CooperationNews | Education & TrainingJoin UsPapersResources 
  New Papers
Multimedia
en20131028.jpg
The 5th International Conference on Rodent Biol...
Rodent adaptation and survival under global change
  Th...

Workshop on Phylogenetic comparative methods in...
The 31st IUBS GA and Conference on Biological ...
Special issue of Integrative Zoology: Biologica...
Exploring and integrating cellulolytic systems ...
      More>>
  Location: Home > New Papers
†Alienoptera – a New Insect Order in the Roach - Mantodean Twilight Zone
[ Update Time: 2016-03-29 ]

A new insect species (†Alienopterus brachyelytrus Bai, Beutel, Klass, Wipfler et Zhanggen. et sp. nov.) of a new order and family is described, based on a single male embedded in Cretaceous Burmese amber (ca. 99 Ma). Unusual characters are shortened forewings combined with fully developed, operational hindwings, similar as in Dermaptera, and specialized attachment pads otherwise only found in mantophasmatodeans (heelwalkers). A cladistic analysis suggests a placement as sister to Mantodea, supported by a profemoral brush and other characters. The male genitalia show the same pattern in both groups. Specialized features are the unusual flight apparatus, attachment structures adapted for locomotion on leaves, and a dense profemoral setation suitable for catching small prey. †Alienopterus was apparently able to fly and likely a predator of small arthropods in bushes or trees. An impressive radiation of Mantodea started in similar habitats at least 35 Ma later in the early Cenozoic. In contrast, †Alienopterus was an evolutionary dead end in the roach-mantis transition zone.

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1342937X16300041

 
Copyright 1995-2020 INSTITUTE OF ZOOLOGY, CHINESE ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
Tel: +86-10-64807098, Fax: +86-10-64807099, Email: ioz@ioz.ac.cn
Address: 1 Beichen West Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing 100101, P.R.China
Internet Explorer 6.0+, best view with resolution 1024x768