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Wanted, tracked down and identified: Mesozoic non-biting midges of the subfamily Chironominae (Chironomidae, Diptera)

Wojciech Giłka, Marta Zakrzewska, Elena D. Lukashevich, Dmitry Vorontsov, Agnieszka Soszyńska‐Maj, Kornelia Skibińska, Peter S. Cranston

2021Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Here we provide evidence for the presence of non-biting midges of the subfamily Chironominae in the Mesozoic, based on descriptions of exceptionally rare amber inclusions. The subfamily has already been reported, but based on a single and unspecified record from Late Cretaceous Taimyr amber (~84 Mya). That record is here revised and confirmed. Moreover, a new find in Burmese amber locates the temporal boundary of the subfamily back to the mid-Cretaceous (probably ~100 Mya). We describe two new genera assigned to the tribe Pseudochironomini: Mesoacentron gen. nov. with the species Mesoacentron kaluginae sp. nov. (Taimyr amber) and Palaeocentron gen. nov. with the species Palaeocentron krzeminskii sp. nov. (Burmese amber), the oldest known representative of the subfamily. The systematic position of the new taxa is discussed, and a key to the identification of adult males of extinct and extant Pseudochironomini genera is presented. Insights in the phylogeny and diversification tempo of the Chironominae and Pseudochironomini in the past are also provided.

Topics & Concepts

BiologySubfamilyChironomidaeZoologyTribeCretaceousTaxonEcologyLarvaPaleontologyBiochemistrySociologyGeneAnthropologyFossil Insects in AmberColeoptera Taxonomy and DistributionLepidoptera: Biology and Taxonomy
Wanted, tracked down and identified: Mesozoic non-biting midges of the subfamily Chironominae (Chironomidae, Diptera) | Litcius