| Literature DB >> 31664070 |
Bao-Jie Du1, Rui Chen2, Xin-Zheng Li3, Wen-Tao Tao1, Wen-Jun Bu1, Jin-Hua Xiao4, Da-Wei Huang5,6.
Abstract
The aquatic and semiaquatic invertebrates in fossiliferous amber have been reported, including taxa in a wide range of the subphylum Crustacea of Arthropoda. However, no caridean shrimp has been discovered so far in the world. The shrimp Palaemon aestuarius sp. nov. (Palaemonidae) preserved in amber from Chiapas, Mexico during Early Miocene (ca. 22.8 Ma) represents the first and the oldest amber caridean species. This finding suggests that the genus Palaemon has occupied Mexico at least since Early Miocene. In addition, the coexistence of the shrimp, a beetle larva, and a piece of residual leaf in the same amber supports the previous explanations for the Mexican amber depositional environment, in the tide-influenced mangrove estuary region.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31664070 PMCID: PMC6820862 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-51218-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Morphological photographs of P. aestuarius sp. nov. (a) Detail of cephalothorax in lateral view. (b) General view in ateral view. Fl, flagellum; Ro, rostrum; Ey, eyestalk; Co, cornea; Bg, branchiostegal groove; Bs, branchiostegal spine; Sc, scaphocerite; Mp3, third maxillipede; P1, first pereiopod; P3, third pereiopod; P4, forth pereiopod; P5, fifth pereiopod; Pm1, first pleomere; Pm2, second pleomere; Pm3, third pleomere; Pm4, forth pleomere; Pm5, fifth pleomere; Pm6, sixth pleomere; Te, telson; Ur, uropod. Scale bar, 2 mm.
Figure 2Reconstruction of habitus of P. aestuarius sp. nov. (lateral view). The abbreviations represent the same morphological characteristics as the Fig. 1. Scale bar, 2 mm.