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1.
Sci Adv ; 6(10): eaay1259, 2020 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32181343

ABSTRACT

Mesozoic long-proboscid scorpionflies (Mesopsychoidea) provide important clues to ancient plant-pollinator interactions. Among them, the family Aneuretopsychidae is especially important because its mouthparts are vital to deciphering the early evolution of Mesopsychoidea and putatively the origin of fleas (Siphonaptera). However, the identification of mouthpart homologs among Aneuretopsychidae remains controversial because of the lack of three-dimensional anatomical data. Here, we report the first Aneuretopsychidae from Late Cretaceous Burmese amber, which have short maxillary palpi and elongate mouthpart elements consisting of one pair of galeae and one hypopharynx. Their mouthparts are identical to those of Pseudopolycentropodidae (= Dualulidae, new synonym) but are not homologous to those of Siphonaptera. Our phylogenetic analysis provides robust evidence for the debated monophyly of Mesopsychoidea. Our results suggest that the long-proboscid condition has most likely evolved once in Mesopsychoidea, independently from fleas, and further reveal the variety and complexity of mid-Cretaceous pollinating insects.


Subject(s)
Diptera/classification , Genetic Speciation , Mouth/anatomy & histology , Phylogeny , Scorpions/classification , Siphonaptera/classification , Amber , Animals , China , Diptera/anatomy & histology , Diptera/physiology , Extinction, Biological , Fossils/history , History, Ancient , Mouth/physiology , Myanmar , Plants , Pollination/physiology , Scorpions/anatomy & histology , Scorpions/physiology , Siphonaptera/anatomy & histology , Siphonaptera/physiology
2.
J Evol Biol ; 31(6): 904-913, 2018 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29577502

ABSTRACT

Early-life trade-offs faced by developing offspring can have long-term consequences for their future fitness. Young offspring use begging displays to solicit resources from their parents and have been selected to grow fast to maximize survival. However, growth and begging behaviour are generally traded off against self-maintenance. Oxidative stress, a physiological mediator of life-history trade-offs, may play a major role in this trade-off by constraining, or being costly to, growth and begging behaviour. Yet, despite implications for the evolution of life-history strategies and parent-offspring conflicts, the interplay between growth, begging behaviour and resistance to oxidative stress remains to be investigated. We experimentally challenged wild great tit (Parus major) offspring by infesting nests with a common ectoparasite, the hen flea (Ceratophyllus gallinae), and simultaneously tested for compensating effects of increased vitamin E availability, a common dietary antioxidant. We further quantified the experimental treatment effects on offspring growth, begging intensity and oxidative stress. Flea-infested nestlings of both sexes showed reduced body mass during the first half of the nestling phase, but this effect vanished short before fledging. Begging intensity and oxidative stress of both sexes were unaffected by both experimental treatments. Feeding rates were not affected by the experimental treatments, but parents of flea-infested nests fed nestlings with a higher proportion of caterpillars, the main source of antioxidants. Additionally, female nestlings begged significantly less than males in control nests, whereas both sexes begged at similar rates in vitamin E-supplemented nests. Our study shows that a parasite exposure does not necessarily affect oxidative stress levels or begging intensity, but suggests that parents can compensate for negative effects of parasitism by modifying food composition. Furthermore, our results indicate that the begging capacity of the less competitive sex is constrained by antioxidant availability.


Subject(s)
Antioxidants/pharmacology , Flea Infestations/veterinary , Oxidative Stress/physiology , Passeriformes/physiology , Vitamin E/pharmacology , Animals , Antioxidants/administration & dosage , Feeding Behavior , Female , Male , Passeriformes/growth & development , Siphonaptera/classification , Video Recording , Vitamin E/administration & dosage
3.
Nature ; 483(7388): 201-4, 2012 Feb 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22388812

ABSTRACT

Fleas are one of the major lineages of ectoparasitic insects and are now highly specialized for feeding on the blood of birds or mammals. This has isolated them among holometabolan insect orders, although they derive from the Antliophora (scorpionflies and true flies). Like most ectoparasitic lineages, their fossil record is meagre and confined to Cenozoic-era representatives of modern families, so that we lack evidence of the origins of fleas in the Mesozoic era. The origins of the first recognized Cretaceous stem-group flea, Tarwinia, remains highly controversial. Here we report fossils of the oldest definitive fleas--giant forms from the Middle Jurassic and Early Cretaceous periods of China. They exhibit many defining features of fleas but retain primitive traits such as non-jumping hindlegs. More importantly, all have stout and elongate sucking siphons for piercing the hides of their hosts, implying that these fleas may be rooted among the pollinating 'long siphonate' scorpionflies of the Mesozoic. Their special morphology suggests that their earliest hosts were hairy or feathered 'reptilians', and that they radiated to mammalian and bird hosts later in the Cenozoic.


Subject(s)
Body Size , Fossils , Phylogeny , Siphonaptera/anatomy & histology , Siphonaptera/classification , Animals , China , Dinosaurs/parasitology , History, Ancient , Mammals/parasitology , Parasites/anatomy & histology , Parasites/classification
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