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Eomeropidae

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Family of insects

Eomeropidae
Temporal range: Sinemurian–Recent PreꞒ O S D C P T J K Pg N
Notiothauma reedi
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Mecoptera
Family: Eomeropidae
Cockerell 1909
Genera

Eomeropidae is a family of aberrant, flattened scorpionflies represented today by only a single living species, Notiothauma reedi, known from the Nothofagus forests in southern Chile, while all other recognized genera in the family are known only as fossils, with the earliest definitive fossil known from Liassic-aged strata, and the youngest from Paleogene-aged strata.

Ecology

Notiothauma adults are thought to be saprophagous with a preference for carrion, having been observed feeding on dead chickens and rabbits, though in one experimental study they were also observed feeding on plant material.

Genera

There are six extinct genera and one monotypic living genus which have been placed in Eomeropidae.

Phylogeny

The proposed phylogenetic relationships within Eomeropidae based on Soszyńska-Maj et al 2016.

Eomeropidae

Jurachorista

Jurathauma

Eomerope

Tsuschingothauma

Notiothauma

Typhothauma

Eomeropids have been suggested to be most closely related to the also poorly diverse and relictual Meropeidae.

References

  1. ^ Zhang Junxia; et al. (2011). "A new fossil eomeropid (Insecta, Mecoptera) from the Jiulongshan Formation, Inner Mongolia, China". Zoosystema. 33 (4): 443–450. doi:10.5252/z2011n4a2. hdl:11336/153453. S2CID 86466025.
  2. ^ Wang, Haoyi; Yao, Zongquan; Wang, Jun; Li, Qi; Yang, Jiangfeng (2023-08-29). "The first discovery of Eomeropidae (Insecta: Mecoptera) from the Lower Jurassic of northwestern China". Historical Biology: 1–5. doi:10.1080/08912963.2023.2250821. ISSN 0891-2963.
  3. ^ Archibald, S. Bruce, Alexandr P. Rasnitsyn, and Mikhail A. Akhmetiev. "Ecology and distribution of Cenozoic Eomeropidae (Mecoptera), and a new species of Eomerope Cockerell from the Early Eocene McAbee locality, British Columbia, Canada." Annals of the Entomological Society of America 98.4 (2005): 503-514.
  4. Palmer, Christopher (2010). "Diversity of feeding strategies in adult Mecoptera". Terrestrial Arthropod Reviews. 3 (2): 111–128. doi:10.1163/187498310x519716. ISSN 1874-9828.
  5. Zhang, Kai; Zhao, Xiangdong; Bashkuev, Alexey S.; Xiao, Chuantao (2022-01-07). "The first eomeropid (Insecta, Mecoptera) from mid-Cretaceous Myanmar amber". Cretaceous Research. 133: 105140. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2022.105140. ISSN 0195-6671. S2CID 245824880.
  6. ^ Soszyńska-Maj, Agnieszka; Krzemiński, Wiesław; Kopeć, Katarzyna; Coram, Robert A. (2016). "Phylogenetic relationships within the relict family Eomeropidae (Insecta, Mecoptera) based on the oldest fossil from the Early Jurassic (Sinemurian) of Dorset, southern England". Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. 14 (12): 1025–1031. doi:10.1080/14772019.2016.1139007. ISSN 1477-2019. S2CID 88199799.
  7. Zhang J-X, Shih C-K, Petrulevičius JF, Ren D (2011) A new fossil eomeropid (Insecta, Mecoptera) from the Jiulongshan Formation, Inner Mongolia, China. Zoosystema 33(4): 443–450. doi:10.5252/z2011n4a2
  8. ^ D. Ren and C. K. Shih. 2005. The first discovery of fossil eomeropids from China (Insecta, Mecoptera). Acta Zootaxonomica Sinica 30(2):275-280
  9. Zhao, Xiangdong; Zhao, Xianye; Chen, Lei; Zhang, Qi; Wang, Bo (December 2019). "A new species of Eomeropidae (Insecta: Mecoptera) from the Middle Jurassic of China". Proceedings of the Geologists' Association. 130 (6): 691–695. doi:10.1016/j.pgeola.2019.10.005. S2CID 210264894.
  10. J. X. Zhang, C. K. Shih, and D. Ren. 2012. A new fossil eomeropid (Insecta, Mecoptera) from the Yixian Formation, Liaoning, China. Acta Zootaxonomica Sinica 37:68-71
  11. Zhang, Yanjie; Labandeira, Conrad C.; Yu, Jiamiao; Shih, Chungkun; Ren, Dong; Gao, Taiping (2024-07-23). "Evolution and mandibular sexual dimorphism in mid‐Cretaceous scorpionflies (Insecta: Mecoptera: Meropeidae)". Journal of Systematics and Evolution. doi:10.1111/jse.13121. ISSN 1674-4918.
Extant Mecoptera and Siphonaptera families
Mecoptera
(scorpionflies)
S
i
p
h
o
n
a
p
t
e
r
a


(fleas)
Pulicomorpha
Pulicoidea
Ancistropsylloidea
Coptopsylloidea
Malacopsylloidea
Vermipsylloidea
Ceratophyllomorpha
Ceratophylloidea
Hystrichopsyllomorpha
Stephanocircidoidea
Hystrichopsylloidea
Macropsylloidea
Pygiopsyllomorpha
Pygiopsylloidea
Classification is based on Whiting, M. F. (2002) 
Taxon identifiers
Eomeropidae


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