| Literature DB >> 31431164 |
Hongru Yang1, Xiangchu Yin2, Xiaodan Lin1, Chen Wang3, Chungkun Shih1,4, Weiwei Zhang5, Dong Ren1, Taiping Gao1.
Abstract
Wingless and shorter winged stick insects are very common today, but most known extinct stick insects had fully developed wings, leading to contentious affinities among the extinct winged and extant groups. We report herein three male winged stick insects, assigned to Pterophasmatidae fam. nov., from mid-Cretaceous Myanmar (Burmese) amber. Pterophasmatidae fam. nov. are regarded as transitional taxa from extinct winged to modern wingless and shorter winged stick insects based on their similar tegmina venation with extinct Susumanioidea and some body features the same as extant Phasmatodea. However, their symmetric phallic organs comprising two consistent phallomeres are different from those of all living groups. Phylogenetic analyses suggest that the extinct winged taxa, including the new family, are the stem groups of modern stick and leaf insects, and all of them constitute the clade of Phasmatodea. New findings indicate winged and wingless stick insects' morphologies diversified significantly during or before the mid-Cretaceous.Entities:
Keywords: Pterophasmatidae; male genitalia; morphology; phylogeny; synapomorphy
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31431164 PMCID: PMC6732380 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2019.1085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349