| Literature DB >> 27161503 |
Ninon Robin1, Olivier Béthoux1, Ekaterina Sidorchuk2, Yingying Cui3, Yingnan Li3, Damien Germain1, Andrew King4, Felisa Berenguer5, Dong Ren6.
Abstract
Symbiosis [1], understood as prolonged interspecific association, is as ancient as the eukaryotic cell [2, 3]. A variety of such associations have been reported in the continental fossil record, albeit sporadically. As for mites, which as a group have been present since the Devonian (ca. 390 mya) [4, 5] and are involved in a tremendous variety of modern-day symbioses, reported associations are limited to a few amber-preserved cases [6-11], with the earliest instance in the Cretaceous (ca. 85 mya) [11]. As a consequence, the antiquity and origin of associations involving small-sized mites and larger animals are poorly understood. Here we report, recovered from the Carboniferous Xiaheyan locality (ca. 320 mya), an oribatid mite located on the thorax of an extinct relative of grasshoppers, crickets, and katydids [12]. The mite was investigated using several methods, including phase-contrast tomography. The detailed morphological data allowed the placement of the mite in a new family within Mixonomata, whose fossil record is thus extended by ca. 250 Ma. Specimen and abundance distribution data derived from the fossil insect sample indicate that specimens from the corresponding excavation site were buried rapidly and were sub-autochthonous, indicating a syn vivo association. Moreover, the mite is located in a sequestered position on the insect. The observed interaction best fits the definition for phoresy, in which the benefit is transport and protection for the mite. This discovery demonstrates that this association, a trait shared by representatives of the most speciose mite taxa, arose very early during mite evolution.Entities:
Keywords: Archaeorthoptera; Carboniferous; Ningxia; fossil mite; phoresy; symbiosis
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27161503 DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2016.03.068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Biol ISSN: 0960-9822 Impact factor: 10.834