古代昆虫的伪装技巧
- 指点迷津
- 2024-11-30
- 6
Insects have evolved diverse types of
camouflage
1 that have played an important role in their
evolutionary
2 success.
Debris
3-carrying, a behavior of
actively
4 harvesting and carrying exogenous materials, is among the most fascinating and complex behaviors because it requires not only an ability to recognize, collect, and carry materials, but also evolutionary adaptations in related morphological characteristics. The fossil record, however, of such behavior is extremely scarce, and only a single Mesozoic example from Spanish
amber
5 had been recorded
previously
6; therefore, little is known about the early evolution of this complicated behavior and its
underlying
7
anatomy
8., ,Dr. WANG Bo from the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and his colleagues have now reported a diverse insect assemblage of exceptionally preserved debris carriers from Cretaceous Burmese, French, and Lebanese ambers, including the earliest known chrysopoid
larvae
9 (green lacewings), myrmeleontoid larvae (split-footed lacewings and owlflies), and reduviids (assassin bugs). The study was published on Science Advances, Friday, 24 June 2016., ,These ancient insects used a variety of debris material, including insect exoskeletons, sand grains, soil dust, leaf trichomes of gleicheniacean ferns, wood
fibers
10, and other vegetal debris. They convergently evolved their debris-carrying behavior through multiple pathways, which expressed a high degree of evolutionary plasticity., ,These fossils are the oldest direct evidence of camouflage behavior
utilizing
11 trash in the fossil record and show unequivocal evidence of camouflage in
immature
12 lacewings and reduviids dating back more than 100 million years. They demonstrate that the behavioral
repertoire
13, which is associated with considerable morphological adaptations, was already widespread among insects by at least the Mid-Cretaceous. These findings provide a novel insight into the early evolution of camouflage in insects and ancient
ecological
14 associations among plants and insects., ,Most of the Burmese amber lacewing larvae were preserved with dendritic trichomes produced by gleicheniacean ferns, and two chrysopoid larvae were carrying these trichomes, suggesting that these fossil lacewing larvae were closely associated with the habitats of gleicheniacean ferns.
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