Journal
NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 232, Issue 3, Pages 1414-1423Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.17672
Keywords
angiosperm; Dakota Formation; damage types; Lauraceae; Mealybug; plant-insect association; scale insect
Categories
Funding
- National Natural Science Foundation of China [31730087, 32020103006, 41688103]
- National Science Foundation [2010800]
- Direct For Biological Sciences
- Div Of Biological Infrastructure [2010800] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
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Studying fossilized plants and insects from the Early Cretaceous has revealed the diversity and feeding habits of early sap-sucking insects on plants, providing direct evidence for co-associations and possible coevolution between scale insects and their plant hosts.
Insect fluid-feeding on fossil vascular plants is an inconspicuous and underappreciated mode of herbivory that can provide novel data on the evolution of deep-time ecological associations and indicate the host-plant preferences of ancient insect herbivores. Previous fossil studies have documented piercing-and-sucking herbivory but often are unable to identify culprit insect taxa. One line of evidence are punctures and scale-insect impression marks made by piercing-and-sucking insects that occasionally provide clues to the systematic identities and relationships of particular insect herbivores. We report here the earliest occurrences of piercing and sucking on early angiosperms as evidenced by scale insect covers, impression marks, punctures and body fossils - notably a mealybug - from the Lower Cretaceous Rose Creek Flora of the Dakota Formation (c. 103 Ma), in southeastern Nebraska, USA. The mealybug, two other scale insect taxa, and several distinctive damage types on laurel leaves and seed-plant stems at Rose Creek document a diverse guild of piercing-and-sucking insects on early angiosperms. The discovery of an Early Cretaceous female mealybug indicates an early herbivorous association with a laurel host. These data provide direct evidence for co-associations and possible coevolution of scale insects and their plant hosts during early angiosperm diversification.
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