{"title":"Basal Cyclorrhapha in Amber from the Cretaceous and Tertiary(Insecta: Diptera), and Their Relationships: Brachycera in Cretaceous Amber Part IX","authors":"D. Grimaldi","doi":"10.1206/0003-0090-423.1.1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACT Diverse new basal (aschizan) Cyclorrhapha fossilized in amber are described from the Tertiary and Cretaceous, and their relationships are examined with character-based phylogenetic hypotheses for each family or family group. There are 18 new species in 15 genera (11 of them new) and four families plus the Syrphoidea. Fossils are from the Early Cretaceous of Lebanon, Late Cretaceous of New Jersey (United States) and Alberta (Canada), Eocene of the eastern Baltic coast, and Miocene of the Dominican Republic, but predominantly from the mid-Cretaceous of Myanmar. Stem-group Lonchopteroidea are Alonchoptera lebanica, n. gen., n.sp., and Lonchopterites burmensis, n. sp. Platypezidae include the stem groups Burmapeza radicis, n. gen., n. sp., Canadopeza biacrosticha, n. gen., n. sp., and Calvopeza divergens, n. gen., n. sp. An unnamed Microsania sp. is the first definitive Platypezidae in Baltic amber; Lebanopeza azari, n. gen., n. sp., is a stem group to the Microsaniinae and Melanderomyiinae. Chandleromyia anomala, n. gen., n. sp., is an anomalously derived Platypezinae from the Cretaceous, and two new species of the diverse Recent genus Lindneromyia are in Dominican amber (L. neomedialis and L. dominicana). Fossils of the relict family Ironomyiidae (with 3 living species from eastern Australia) include two stem-group genera with two new species each, all in Burmese amber: Palaeopetia dorsalis and P. terminus, Proironia (n. gen.) gibbera and P. burmitica. All other species of Palaeopetia are compression fossils from the Cretaceous of Asia and Eurasia. For Phoridae, a new defining feature is a stridulatum on the procoxa and profemur in both sexes, occuring in most fossil taxa where observable. New sciadocerines include Eosciadocera pauciseta, n. sp., a very large species in Baltic amber, and two stem groups in Burmese amber, Prophora dimorion, n. gen., n. sp., and a very small, undescribed taxon. Archiphora pria Grimaldi and Cumming in Turonian-aged New Jersey amber is transferred to Hennigophora Brown, based on evidence from a new specimen. Prioriphorinae (not taxonomically treated here) is a paraphyletic, Cretaceous grade to the very diverse, crown-group radiation of Euphorida that occurred in the Cenozoic. Two syrphoids occur in Burmese amber: Prosyrphus thompsoni, n. gen., n. sp. (an apparent stem group to the Syrphidae), and Aschizomyia burmensis, n. gen., n. sp. (with more ambiguous affinities). Several immatures of undetermined family are reported, one a probable phorid larva. No definitive Schizophora are yet known from the Cretaceous.","PeriodicalId":50721,"journal":{"name":"Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History","volume":"1 1","pages":"1 - 97"},"PeriodicalIF":5.1000,"publicationDate":"2018-10-24","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1206/0003-0090-423.1.1","citationCount":"10","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History","FirstCategoryId":"93","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1206/0003-0090-423.1.1","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"环境科学与生态学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 10
Abstract
ABSTRACT Diverse new basal (aschizan) Cyclorrhapha fossilized in amber are described from the Tertiary and Cretaceous, and their relationships are examined with character-based phylogenetic hypotheses for each family or family group. There are 18 new species in 15 genera (11 of them new) and four families plus the Syrphoidea. Fossils are from the Early Cretaceous of Lebanon, Late Cretaceous of New Jersey (United States) and Alberta (Canada), Eocene of the eastern Baltic coast, and Miocene of the Dominican Republic, but predominantly from the mid-Cretaceous of Myanmar. Stem-group Lonchopteroidea are Alonchoptera lebanica, n. gen., n.sp., and Lonchopterites burmensis, n. sp. Platypezidae include the stem groups Burmapeza radicis, n. gen., n. sp., Canadopeza biacrosticha, n. gen., n. sp., and Calvopeza divergens, n. gen., n. sp. An unnamed Microsania sp. is the first definitive Platypezidae in Baltic amber; Lebanopeza azari, n. gen., n. sp., is a stem group to the Microsaniinae and Melanderomyiinae. Chandleromyia anomala, n. gen., n. sp., is an anomalously derived Platypezinae from the Cretaceous, and two new species of the diverse Recent genus Lindneromyia are in Dominican amber (L. neomedialis and L. dominicana). Fossils of the relict family Ironomyiidae (with 3 living species from eastern Australia) include two stem-group genera with two new species each, all in Burmese amber: Palaeopetia dorsalis and P. terminus, Proironia (n. gen.) gibbera and P. burmitica. All other species of Palaeopetia are compression fossils from the Cretaceous of Asia and Eurasia. For Phoridae, a new defining feature is a stridulatum on the procoxa and profemur in both sexes, occuring in most fossil taxa where observable. New sciadocerines include Eosciadocera pauciseta, n. sp., a very large species in Baltic amber, and two stem groups in Burmese amber, Prophora dimorion, n. gen., n. sp., and a very small, undescribed taxon. Archiphora pria Grimaldi and Cumming in Turonian-aged New Jersey amber is transferred to Hennigophora Brown, based on evidence from a new specimen. Prioriphorinae (not taxonomically treated here) is a paraphyletic, Cretaceous grade to the very diverse, crown-group radiation of Euphorida that occurred in the Cenozoic. Two syrphoids occur in Burmese amber: Prosyrphus thompsoni, n. gen., n. sp. (an apparent stem group to the Syrphidae), and Aschizomyia burmensis, n. gen., n. sp. (with more ambiguous affinities). Several immatures of undetermined family are reported, one a probable phorid larva. No definitive Schizophora are yet known from the Cretaceous.
摘要:本文描述了第三纪和白垩纪在琥珀中发现的多种新的基底(aschizan)环裂化石,并对每个科或科群的特征系统发育假设进行了研究。新种18种,分属15属(其中11属为新属),隶属4科,并附有柔蝗总科。化石来自早白垩世的黎巴嫩、晚白垩世的新泽西州(美国)和阿尔伯塔省(加拿大)、波罗的海东部海岸的始新世和多米尼加共和国的中新世,但主要来自中白垩世的缅甸。茎群长翅总科为黎巴嫩长翅目,新属,新属。鸭嘴兽科包括茎群Burmapeza radicis, n. gen, n. sp, Canadopeza biacrosticha, n. gen, n. sp和Calvopeza divergens, n. gen, n. sp. .一种未命名的Microsania sp.是波罗的海琥珀中第一个确定的鸭嘴兽科;黎巴嫩芽孢虫,n.gen, n.sp,是微蝇科和黑蝇科的主干群。Chandleromyia anomala, n. gen., n. sp.,是白垩纪的一个异常衍生的鸭嘴兽科,在多米尼加琥珀中发现了两个新物种(L. neomedialis和L. dominicana)。遗存的铁蝇科化石(澳大利亚东部有3个现存种)包括两个茎群属,各有两个新种,均在缅甸琥珀中发现:古背蝇属(Palaeopetia dorsalis)和P. terminus,原赤蝇属(Proironia)和P. burmitica。所有其他种类的古猿都是来自亚洲和欧亚大陆白垩纪的压缩化石。对于栉虫科,一个新的定义特征是在两性的前趾和前趾上都有纹状体,在大多数可观察到的化石分类群中都有。新的琥珀类包括波罗的海琥珀中一个非常大的种Eosciadocera pauciseta, n. sp.和缅甸琥珀中的两个茎群,proproa dimorion, n. gen., n. sp.和一个非常小的未描述的分类群。根据来自一个新标本的证据,turonian年代的新泽西琥珀中的Archiphora pria Grimaldi和Cumming被转移到Hennigophora Brown身上。priority phorinae(这里没有分类学上的讨论)是一个白垩纪的副类,到新生代出现的Euphorida的非常多样化的冠群辐射。缅甸琥珀中有两种食蚜虫:prosyphus thompsoni, n. gen., n. sp.(食蚜科的一个明显的茎类)和Aschizomyia burma, n. gen., n. sp.(有更模糊的亲缘关系)。报告了几个未成熟的未确定科,一个可能是蚜虫幼虫。从白垩纪至今还没有确定的裂肢动物。
期刊介绍:
The Bulletin, published continuously since 1881, consists of longer monographic volumes in the field of natural sciences relating to zoology, paleontology, and geology. Current numbers are published at irregular intervals. The Bulletin was originally a place to publish short papers, while longer works appeared in the Memoirs. However, in the 1920s, the Memoirs ceased and the Bulletin series began publishing longer papers. A new series, the Novitates, published short papers describing new forms.