Researchers
reporting in the journal Current
Biology on
December 4 have found the earliest-known fossil mosquito in Lower Cretaceous
amber from Lebanon. What's more, the well-preserved insects are two males of
the same species with piercing mouthparts, suggesting they likely sucked blood.
That's noteworthy because, among modern-day mosquitoes, only females are
hematophagous, meaning that they use piercing mouthparts to feed on the blood
of people and other animals.
"Lebanese amber is, to date, the
oldest amber with intensive biological inclusions, and it is a very important
material as its formation is contemporaneous with the appearance and beginning
of radiation of flowering plants, with all what follows of co-evolution between
pollinators and flowering plants," says Dany Azar of the Nanjing Institute
of Geology and Paleontology at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Lebanese
University.
"Molecular dating suggested that
the family Culicidae arose during the Jurassic, but previously the oldest
record was mid-Cretaceous," says André Nel of the National Museum of
Natural History of Paris (Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle de Paris).
"Here we have one from the early Cretaceous, about 30 million years
before."
The Culicidae family of arthropods
includes more than 3,000 species of mosquitoes. The new findings suggest that
male mosquitoes in the past fed on blood as
well, according to the researchers. They also help to narrow the
"ghost-lineage gap" for mosquitoes, they say.
Head,
ventral view; scale bar 100 mm. Credit: Current Biology/Azar et al.
Female
mosquitoes are notorious for their blood-feeding ways, which has made them a
major vector for spreading infectious diseases. Hematophagy in insects is
thought to have arisen as a shift from piercing-sucking mouthparts used to
extract plant fluids. For example, blood-sucking fleas likely arose from
nectar-feeding insects. But the evolution of blood feeding has been hard to
study in part due to gaps in the insect fossil record.
In the new study, Azar, Nel, Diying
Huang, and Michael S. Engel describe two male mosquitoes with piercing
mouthparts, including an exceptionally sharp, triangular mandible and elongated
structure with small, tooth-like denticles.
They report that the mosquitoes'
preservation in amber extends the definitive occurrence of the mosquito family
of insects into the early Cretaceous. It also suggests that the evolution of
hematophagy was more complicated than had been suspected, with hematophagous
males in the distant past.
In future work, Nel says the team wants
to learn more about the "utility" of having hematophagy in Cretaceous male mosquitoes. They're also curious to explore "why this no
longer exists," he says.
by Cell Press
Source: Earliest-known fossil mosquito suggests males were bloodsuckers too (phys.org)
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