The Diversity of Larvae with Multi-Toothed Stylets from About 100 Million Years Ago Illuminates the Early Diversification of Antlion-like Lacewings

Author:

Braig Florian1ORCID,Popp Timo1,Zippel Ana1ORCID,Haug Gideon T.1,Linhart Simon1,Müller Patrick2,Weiterschan Thomas3,Haug Joachim T.14ORCID,Haug Carolin14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Biology, Biocenter, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (LMU Munich), 82152 Planegg-Martinsried, Germany

2. Independent Researcher, 66482 Zweibrücken, Germany

3. Independent Researcher, 64739 Höchst im Odenwald, Germany

4. GeoBio-Center at LMU, 80333 München, Germany

Abstract

Neuroptera, the group of lacewings, is well known to have been more diverse in the past, offering to study patterns of biodiversity loss over time. This loss of diversity has been quantitatively established by the morphological diversity of lacewing larvae. Here, we explore in more detail the diversity of lacewing larvae with tooth-bearing mouthparts. All these larvae are representatives of Myrmeleontiformia, the group of antlion-like lacewings. Today, larvae of several major ingroups bear teeth on their mouthparts: (1) owllions (formerly Ascalaphidae and Myrmeleontidae; taxonomic status is currently unclear); (2) Nymphidae; (3) Crocinae (mostly in younger larvae); and (4) Nemopterinae (only micro teeth). In addition, there are several now extinct larval types with teeth known from Cretaceous ambers (about 100 million years old). These larvae also possess several plesiomorphic characters, indicating that they were part of the early diversification of Myrmeleontiformia. We report numerous new specimens of these now extinct forms and provide a quantitative morphological comparison of head and mouthpart shapes, demonstrating that some of these Cretaceous larvae possessed morphologies not represented in the extant fauna. The resulting pattern is complex, indicating that at least some extinct morphologies have been later replaced by modern-day antlions due to convergent evolution.

Funder

Volkswagen Foundation

German Research Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous),Ecological Modeling,Ecology

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