First 3D reconstruction of the male genitalia of a Cretaceous fossil cricket: Diving into the evolutionary history of the Oecanthidae family (Orthoptera: Grylloidea) with the incorporation of new fossils in its phylogeny and a total‐evidence dating approach

Author:

Ferreira Jules1ORCID,Desutter‐Grandcolas Laure1ORCID,Nel André1ORCID,Josse Hugo12ORCID,de Campos Lucas Denadai3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institut de Systématique, Evolution, Biodiversité (ISYEB) Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, CNRS Sorbonne Université, EPHE‐PSL Paris France

2. Géosciences Rennes, UMR 6118 Université de Rennes Rennes France

3. Departamento de Zoologia, Instituto de Biociências Universidade de São Paulo São Paulo Brazil

Abstract

AbstractFossils are valuable indicators of the evolutionary history of the clades to which they belong to, especially when they are incorporated as terminal taxa in a total‐evidence phylogeny. According to their state of preservation, fossils are often incompletely described for key morphological characters, such as genitalic structures. Here, the internal parts of the genitalia of a male fossil cricket from Cretaceous amber, †Picogryllus carentonensis Josse & Desutter‐Grandcolas (Oecanthidae, Podoscirtinae), together with other key morphological characters (i.e., metanotal structures and tibial spurs), were reconstructed for the first time by 3D microtomography. Total‐evidence phylogeny and dating combining morphological data (fossils and extant taxa), molecular data (extant taxa only) and time calibration (fossil dates) were performed to evaluate the tempo and mode of evolution of the cricket family Oecanthidae. Divergence time estimates were thus refined and the patterns of transformation for key morphological structures contrasted through the analysis of phylogenetic morphological partitions. Our results show that Oecanthidae date back to the Upper Jurassic (Oxfordian, around 162 Ma) and attest to the presence of the Podoscirtinae in Western Europe during the Lower Cretaceous. Morphological evolution may have been driven by the conquest of new resources (as shown by leg evolution in ancestral Oecanthidae) and/or the ‘conquest of silence’ (as shown by repetitive and definitive losses of acoustic structures). By contrast, genitalia evolution proved more diffuse.

Funder

Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo

Publisher

Wiley

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