Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-gb8f7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T01:11:28.620Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A new species of Orthobittacus (Mecoptera, Bittacidae) from the Middle Jurassic of Daohugou, Inner Mongolia (China)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2017

Katarzyna Kopeć
Affiliation:
Institute of Systematics and Evolution of Animals, Polish Academy of Sciences, 31-016 Kraków, Poland
Wiesław Krzemiński
Affiliation:
Institute of Biology, Pedagogical University of Kraków, 31-054 Kraków, Poland
Agnieszka Soszyńska-Maj*
Affiliation:
Department of Invertebrate Zoology and Hydrobiology, University of Łódź, 90-237 Łódź, Poland; e-mail: [email protected]
Yizi Cao
Affiliation:
College of Life Sciences, Capital Normal University, Beijing 100048, China
Dong Ren
Affiliation:
College of Life Sciences, Capital Normal University, Beijing 100048, China
*
*Corresponding author

Abstract

The genus Orthobittacus was established by Willmann (1989) and is characterised by a long Sc vein and the unusually developed medial sector for the Bittacidae. Four Jurassic species have been described in this genus to date: O. abshiricus (Martynova, 1951) from Kirgizia; O.desacuminatus (Bode, 1953) from Braunschweig (Germany); O. polymitus Novokshonov, 1996 from Karatau (Kazakhstan); and O. maculosus Liu, Shih, Bashkuev & Ren, 2016 from the Jiulongshan Formation of Daohugou (China). The fifth congeneric and second species from China, O. suni sp. nov., is described herein. The importance of the genus Orthobittacus for the phylogeny of Bittacidae, as the most plesiomorphic genus, is discussed.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Society of Edinburgh 2017 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

5. References

Ansorge, J. 1993. Parabittacus analis Handlirsch, 1939 und Parabittacus lingula (Bode, 1953), Neorthophlebiiden (Insecta: Mecoptera) aus dem Oberen Lias von Deutschland. Paläontologische Zeitschrift 67, 293–98.Google Scholar
Ansorge, J. 1996. Insekten aus dem Oberen Lias von Grimmen (Vorpommern, Norddeutschland). Neue Paläontologische Abhandlungen 2, 1132.Google Scholar
Bechly, G. & Schweigert, G. 2000. The first fossil hanging flies (Insecta: Mecoptera: Raptipedia: Cimbrophlebiidae and Bittacidae) from the limestones of Solnhofen and Nusplingen (Upper Jurassic, Germany). Stuttgarter Beiträge zur Naturkunde, (B), Geologie und Paläontologie 287, 118.Google Scholar
Bicha, W. J. 2007. The first hangingfly (Mecoptera: Bittacidae) described from Vietnam. Russian Entomological Journal 16, 333–35.Google Scholar
Bicha, W. J. 2011. A review of the Hangingflies (Mecoptera: Bittacidae) of South Asia with the description of a new species of Bittacus from Nepal. Zootaxa 3032, 6064.Google Scholar
Bode, A. 1953. Die Insektenfauna des ostnieders?chsischen Oberen Lias. Palaeontographica A, 103, 1375.Google Scholar
Cai, L. J., Huang, P. Y. & Hua, B. Z. 2006. Two new Chinese Bittacus Latreille (Mecoptera: Bittacidae) from Michangshan Mountains. Entomotaxonomia 28, 127–30.Google Scholar
Carpenter, F. M. 1928. A scorpion-fly from the Green River Eocene. Annals of the Carnegie Museum 18, 241–48.Google Scholar
Carpenter, F. M. 1954. The Baltic amber Mecoptera. Psyche 61, 3140.10.1155/1954/80512Google Scholar
Carpenter, F. M. 1955. An Eocene Bittacus (Mecoptera). Psyche 62, 3941.Google Scholar
Chen, J., Tan, J. L. & Hua, B. Z. 2013. Review of the Chinese Bittacus (Mecoptera: Bittacidae) with descriptions of three new species. Journal of Natural History 47, 2122.Google Scholar
Chen, J. & Hua, B. 2011. A second species of Bittacus Latreille, 1805 (Mecoptera: Bittacidae). Zootaxa 3093, 6468.Google Scholar
Collucci, E. & Amorim, D. 2002. Three new species of Thyridates NAVÁS, 1908 (Mecoptera, Bittacidae) from Brazil, with new combinations and some comments about phylogenetic relationships within the genus. Contribuições Avulsas Sobre a História Natural do Brasil, Série Zoologia 21, 18.Google Scholar
Garcia-Garcia, A. & Cadena-Castañeda, O. J. 2015. Una especie nueva de Pazius Navás, 1908 (Mecoptera: Bittacidae) de Colombia. Boletín Sociedad Entomológica Aragonesa 57, 200–04.Google Scholar
Handlirsch, A. 1906–1908. Die fossilen Insekten und die Phylogenie der rezenten Formen. Ein Handbuch für Paläontologen und Zoologen. Leipzig: Engelman, 1430 pp.Google Scholar
Handlirsch, A. 1939. Neue Untersuchungen über die fossilen Insekten mit Ergänzungen und Nachträgen sowie Ausblicken auf phylogenetische, palaeogeographische und allgemeine biologische Probleme. Annalen des Naturhistorischen Museums in Wien 49, 1240.Google Scholar
Hua, B., Tan, J. & Huang, P. 2008. Two new species of the genus Bittacus (Mecoptera: Bittacidae) from China. Zootaxa 1749, 6268.Google Scholar
Huang, P. Y. & Hua, B. Z. 2005. Four new species of the Chinese Bittacus Latreille (Mecoptera, Bittacidae). Acta Zootaxonomica Sinica 30, 393–98.Google Scholar
Kopeć, K., Soszyńska-Maj, A., Krzemiński, W. & Coram, R. A. 2016. A new hangingfly (Insecta, Mecoptera, Bittacidae) from the Purbeck Limenstone Group (Lower Cretaceous) of southern England and a review of Cretaceous Bittacidae. Cretaceous Research 57, 122–30.Google Scholar
Krzemiński, W. 2007. A revision of Eocene Bittacidae (Mecoptera) from Baltic amber with the description of a new species. African Invertebrates 48, 153–62.Google Scholar
Li, Y., Ren, D. & Shih, C. K. 2008. Two Middle Jurassic hanging-flies (Insecta: Mecoptera: Bittacidae) from Northeast China. Zootaxa 1929, 3846.10.11646/zootaxa.1929.1.2Google Scholar
Li, Y. L. & Ren, D. 2009. Middle Jurassic Bittacidae (Insecta: Mecoptera) from Daohugou, Inner Mongolia, China. Acta Zootaxonomica Sinica 3, 560–67.Google Scholar
Liu, S., Shih, C. K. & Ren, D. 2014. Four new species of hangingflies (Insecta, Mecoptera, Bittacidae) from the Middle Jurassic of northeastern China. Zookeys 466, 7794.10.3897/zookeys.466.8047Google Scholar
Liu, S., Shih, C. K., Bashkuev, A. & Ren, D. 2016. New Jurassic hangingflies (Insects: Mecoptera: Bittacidae) from Inner Mongolia, China. Zootaxa 4067, 6578.Google Scholar
Martynov, A. 1927. Jurassic fossil Mecoptera and Paratrichoptera from Turkestan and Ust-Balei (Siberia). Bulletin de l'Académie des Sciences de l'URSS 21, 651–66.Google Scholar
Martynova, O. M. 1951. [Two new species of Upper-Lias insects from Kizil–Kia (Kirgizian SSR).] Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR 78, 1009–11. [In Russian.]Google Scholar
Novokshonov, V. G. 1993a. Die interessante Bittacidenreste (Mecoptera Insecta) aus dem Jura von Eurasien. Russian Entomological Journal 2, 5762.Google Scholar
Novokshonov, V. G. 1993b. Mückenhafte (Mecoptera Bittacidae) aus dem Jura, Kreide und Paläogen von Eurasien und ihre phylogenetischen Beziehungen. Russian Entomological Journal 2, 7586.Google Scholar
Novokshonov, V. G. 1996. Orthobittacus polymitus sp.n. und Asiathauma sajsagulis gen. et sp.n., zwei fossile Mecoptera-Arten aus dem Jura von Kasachstan und Kirgisien. Russian Entomological Journal 5, 9496.Google Scholar
Novokshonov, V. G. 1997a. [Early evolution of scorpionflies (Insecta: Panorpida).] Moscow: Nauka. 140 pp. [In Russian.]Google Scholar
Novokshonov, V. G. 1997b. [Some mesozoic scorpionflies (Insecta: Panorpida, Mecoptera) of the families Mesopsychidae, Pseudopolycentrodidae, Bittacidae, and Permochoristidae.] Paleontologicheskij Zhurnal 1, 6571. [In Russian.]Google Scholar
Packard, A. S. 1886. A new arrangement of the orders of insects. The American Naturalist 20, 808.Google Scholar
Penny, N. D. 1997. World checklist of extant Mecoptera species. San Francisco: California Academy of Sciences.Google Scholar
Petrulevičius, J. F. 1998. First hanging fly fossil from South America, 34 p. In The First International Paaleoentomological Conference, Moscow, 1998. Moscow: Paleontological Institute.Google Scholar
Petrulevičius, J. F. 2001a. Cenozoic insects from Argentina. In Proceedings of the First International Meeting on Paleoarthropology. Acta Geologica Leopoldensia 24, 137–44.Google Scholar
Petrulevičius, J. F. 2001b. Insectos del Paleogeno del Noroeste de la Argentina. Sistematica, tafonomía y paleosinecología. Unpublished Doctoral Thesis, Universidad Nacional de La Plata. 229 pp.Google Scholar
Petrulevičius, J. F. 2003. Phylogenetic and biogeographical remarks on Thyridates (Mecoptera: Bittacidae), with the first fossil record of the taxon. Acta Zoologica Cracoviensia 46(suppl. Fossil insects), 257–65.Google Scholar
Petrulevičius, J. F., Huang, D. Y. & Ren, D. 2007. A new hangingfly (Insecta: Mecoptera: Bittacidae) from the Middle Jurassic of Inner Ongolia, China. African Invertebrates 48, 145–52.Google Scholar
Petrulevičius, J. F. & Martins-Neto, R. G. 2001. A bittacid from Santana Formation, Lower Cretaceous of Brazil. Legal and ethical remarks. Acta Geologica Leopoldensia 24, 125–27.Google Scholar
Ren, D. 1993. First discovery of fossil bittacids from China. Acta Geologica Sinica 67, 376–81.Google Scholar
Ren, D. 1997. Studies on Late Jurassic scorpion-flies from Northeast China. Acta Zootaxonomica Sinica 22, 75-–85.Google Scholar
Riek, E. F. 1955. Fossil insects from the Triassic beds at Mt. Crosby, Queensland. Australian Journal of Zoology 3, 654–91.Google Scholar
Soszyńska-Maj, A Krzemiński, W., Kopeć, K. & Coram, R. 2017. Worcestobiidae – a new Triassic family of Mecoptera, removed from the family Orthophlebiidae. Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 107(for 2016), 145–49.Google Scholar
Sukatsheva, I. D. 1990. Scorpionflies. Panorpida. In Rasnitsyn, A. P. (ed.) [Late Mesozoic insects of Eastern Transbaikalia.] Transactions of the Paleontological Institute of the USSR Academy of Sciences 239, 8894. [In Russian.]Google Scholar
Tan, J. & Hua, B. 2008a. First Discovery of Bittacidae (Mecoptera) in Hainan Island, China, with Description of a New Species. Entomological News 119, 497500.Google Scholar
Tan, J. & Hua, B. 2008b. A new species of the genus Bittacus (Mecoptera, Bittacidae) from Zhejiang, China. Acta Zootaxonomica Sinica 33, 487–90.Google Scholar
Tan, J. & Hua, B. 2009a. Terrobittacus, a new genus of the Chinese Bittacidae (Mecoptera) with descriptions of two new species. Journal of Natural History 43, 2937–54.10.1080/00222930903359628Google Scholar
Tan, J. & Hua, B. 2009b. Bicaubittacus, a new genus of the Oriental Bittacidae (Mecoptera) with descriptions of two new species. Zootaxa 2221, 2740.Google Scholar
Tillyard, R. J. 1933. The Panorpoid Complex in the British Rhaetic and Lias. Fossil Insects 3, 179. London: The British Museum (Natural History). 79 pp.Google Scholar
Villagomez, F., Contreras-Ramos, A. & Marquez-López, Y. 2015. Rediscovery of Eremobittacus spinulatus Byers (Mecoptera, Bittacidae) in Mexico, with description of the females and comments on sexual dimorphism and potential mimicry. Zookeys 539, 111–17.Google Scholar
Wang, C., Shih, C. & Ren, D. 2014. A new fossil hangingfly (Mecoptera: Cimbrophlebiidae) from the Early Cretaceous of China. Acta Geologica Sinica) 88, 2934. [English Edition.]Google Scholar
Willmann, R. 1978. Mecoptera (Insecta, Holometabola). Pars 124. In Westphal, F. (ed.) Fossilum Catalogus, Animalia. The Hague: Junk.Google Scholar
Willmann, R. 1987. The phylogenetic system of the Mecoptera. Systematic Entomology 12, 519–24.Google Scholar
Willmann, R. 1989. Evolution und Phylogenetisches System der Mecoptera (Insecta: Holometabola). Abhandlungen der Senckenbergischen Naturforschenden Gesellschaft 544, 1153.Google Scholar
Yang, X.-G., Ren, D. & Shih, C.-K. 2012. New fossil hangingflies (Mecoptera, Raptipeda, Bittacidae) from the Middle Jurassic to Early Cretaceous of Northeastern China. Geodiversitas 34, 785–99.Google Scholar