Jurassic Park approached: a coccid from Kimmeridgian cheirolepidiacean Aintourine Lebanese amber
Peter Vršanský, Hemen Sendi, Júlia Kotulová, Jacek Szwedo, Martina Havelcová, Helena Pálková, Lucia Vršanská, Jakub Sakala, Ľubica Puškelová, Marián Golej, Adrián Biroň, Daniel Peyrot, Donаld L. J. Quicke, Didier Néraudeau, Pavel Uher, Sibelle Maksoud, Dany Azar
Abstract
ABSTRACT With the exception of a fly and a mite from the Triassic of Italy, all Mesozoic amber arthropods are from the Cretaceous. Late Jurassic Lebanese amber from Aintourine revealed a completely preserved adult coccid male (wing length 0.8 mm), Jankotejacoccus libanogloria gen. et sp. n., the earliest record of a plant sucking scale insect. Associated plant material included the cheirolepidiaceans Protopodocarpoxylon, Brachyphyllum and Classostrobus, plus Classopolis pollen, suggesting a forested temporary swamp habitat with ferns, tree ferns, water ferns, tall araucarian and ginkgoacean trees and shrubs. (Sub)tropic lateritic soil with vegetation debris underwent incomplete microbial decomposition in an anoxic water environment of peat swamp development. Strata-associated marine organisms support the Kimmeridgian age revealed by zircons. The discovery opens a new field of research in Jurassic amber fossils.