Showing posts with label Yanliao Biota. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yanliao Biota. Show all posts

Sunday, 12 November 2023

Lampreys from the Jurassic of northeast China, and their implications for the history of the group.

As one of only two groups of living jawless Vertebrates, Lampreys (Petromyzontiformes) have an important place in our understanding of the history of the group. They have a unique feeding style, with a sucker mouth which they use to attach to their prey, before either detaching a chunk of tissue to be consumed or remaining attached and draining their host's blood. Fossil Lampreys are known from the Carboniferous, showing that they have been around for at least 360 million years, but unfortunately the post-Carboniferous fossil record of the group to-date comprises only two species from the Cretaceous Jehol Biota of China. These Jehol Lampreys are apparently little different from their modern relatives, implying that some significant changes had taken place between the Carboniferous and the Cretaceous, including a re-arranging of the arrangement of the keratinous teeth, the appearance of a worm-like ammocoete larval stage, the invasion of fresh-water environments, and the adoption of an anti-tropical distribution (i.e. being found outside the tropics in both hemispheres, but being absent from tropical areas). 

In a paper published in the journal Nature Communications on 31 October 2023, Feixiang Wu of the Key Laboratory of Vertebrate Evolution and Human Origins at the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Philippe Janvier of the Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, and Chi Zhang, also of the Key Laboratory of Vertebrate Evolution and Human Origins at the , Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, describe two new species of Lamprey from the Middle Jurassic Yanliao Biota Lagerstätte of northeastern China, and discuss the implications of these for the evolution of Lampreys as a group.

Both of these Jurassic Lampreys have a feeding apparatus which includes well-developed movable biting plates on the tongue-like piston, something known in the living Pouched Lamprey, Geotria australis, which is found in New Zealand, Chile, Argentina, the Falkland Islands, South Georgia and the southwest and southeast corners of Australia, but which has not previously been seen in any fossil Lamprey. The discovery of this trait in Jurassic Lampreys has important implications for the history of the group, suggesting that this may be a lost ancestral trait in the group, not an advanced development in the Pouched Lamprey, as had previously been assumed.

Both new species are placed in a new genus, Yanliaomyzon, meaning 'Yanliao sucker' in reference to the Yanliao Biota and the feeding apparatus of Lampreys. Both members of the genus have oral discs with well-toothed anterior and lateral fields, the teeth on these fields are closely arranged, dorsally truncated, and spatulate in shape with the slightly concaved under-surface of the free edge protruding as a shallow blade. 

The first new species is named Yanliaomyzon occisor, where 'occisor' means 'killer' in reference to the presumed hunting habit of the species. The species is described from two specimens, the first being complete and coming from the Daxishan locality in Jianchang County, Liaoning Province, and the second comprising a head and the forepart of the body, and coming from the Nanshimen Village locality in Hebei Province. Both are from the Tiaojishan Formation, which is thought to be between 160 and 158.58 million years old. Yanliaomyzon occisor has a supraoral lamina which completely spans the lateral rims of the oral aperture, the central cusps of which are flanked immediately by two smaller projections. It has 16 circumoral teeth, and a tail which takes up 28% of its bodylength.

Jurassic Lamprey from the Yanliao Biota, China, Yanliaomyzon occisor (a) Photograph of holotype (IVPP V 15830); (b) Line drawing of the oral disc and dentition of (a); (c), (d) Paratype (IVPP V 18956B), photograph (c) and line drawing (d); (e) Restoration. Abbreviations: adf, ‘anterior dorsal fin’ (dorsal fin); af, anal fin fold; ba, branchial apparatus; ca, cloaca (anus); cot, circumoral teeth; da, dorsal aorta; dcf, dorsal lobe of caudal fin; dt, oral disc teeth; cf, caudal fin; e, eyes; dt, disc teeth; go, external gill openings; gp, gular pouch; ic, intestine contents; io, infraoral lamina; ll, longitudinal lingual lamina; ll.l, left longitudinal lingual lamina; ll.r, right longitudinal lingual lamina; lv, liver; ns, olfactory organ (nasal sac); oc, otic capsule; od, oral disc; of, oral fimbriae; op, oral papilla(e); paf, precloacal skin fold; pdf, ‘posterior dorsal fin’ (anterior part of caudal fin); pt, piston cartilage; so, supraoral lamina; tl, transverse lingual lamina; vcf, ventral lobe of caudal fin; V1?, ophthalmic ramus of trigeminal nerve? Wu et al. (2023).

The second new species is named Yanliaomyzon ingensdentes, where 'ingensdentes' means 'large teeth', in reference to the large cuspid laminae on the gouging piston of this species. This species is described from a complete specimen and a separate preserved oral disk, both from the Daohugou Beds at Wubaiding Village in Reshuitang County, Liaoning Province, a locality dated to about 163 million years ago. Yanliaomyzon ingensdentes has a supraoral lamina occupying roughly one-third of the rim of the oral aperture; as well as a transverse lingual lamina which almost equals the supraoral lamina in width. It has about 23 circumoral teeth, and a tail which makes up about 40% of its bodylength.

Jurassic Lamprey from the Yanliao Biota, China, Yanliaomyzon ingensdentes (f) Photograph of holotype (IVPP V 16715B), white arrow pointing to the skeletal relics in gut content; (g) Oral disc and dentition; (h) Restoration. Abbreviations: adf, ‘anterior dorsal fin’ (dorsal fin); af, anal fin fold; ba, branchial apparatus; ca, cloaca (anus); cot, circumoral teeth; da, dorsal aorta; dcf, dorsal lobe of caudal fin; dt, oral disc teeth; cf, caudal fin; e, eyes; dt, disc teeth; go, external gill openings; gp, gular pouch; ic, intestine contents; io, infraoral lamina; ll, longitudinal lingual lamina; ll.l, left longitudinal lingual lamina; ll.r, right longitudinal lingual lamina; lv, liver; ns, olfactory organ (nasal sac); oc, otic capsule; od, oral disc; of, oral fimbriae; op, oral papilla(e); paf, precloacal skin fold; pdf, ‘posterior dorsal fin’ (anterior part of caudal fin); pt, piston cartilage; so, supraoral lamina; tl, transverse lingual lamina; vcf, ventral lobe of caudal fin; V1?, ophthalmic ramus of trigeminal nerve? Wu et al. (2023).

Both species of Yanliaomyzon are large, with the complete specimen of Yanliaomyzon occisor measuring 642 mm; among extant Lampreys this is exceeded only by the Anadromous Sea Lamprey, Petromyzon marinus (maximum adult length 1200 mm), Pacific Lamprey, Entosphenus tridentatus (850 mm), Pouched Lamprey, Geotria australis (788 mm), and Arctic Lamprey, Lethenteron camtschaticum (790 mm). 

The most distinctive feature of these Lampreys is the extensively toothed oral disc and tongue-like piston, which is similar in morphology to that of the extant Poached Lamprey, a species with a Southern Hemisphere distribution, which is capable of delivering a powerful bite and removing large chunks of flesh from its prey. 

Feeding apparatus of Yanliaomyzon and the Pouched Lamprey, Geotria australis. (a)–(d) Oral disc and dentition of Yanliaomyzon ingensdentes, (a) Photograph (IVPP V 16716B) and (b) Line drawing; (c) Photograph (IVPP V 16716A), whitened with ammonium chloride, the white arrow pointing to the imprints of the wrinkles of the gular pouch; (d) Restoration. (e), (f) Oral disc and dentition of Yanliaomyzon occisor, (e) Photograph (IVPP V18956A), whitened with ammonium chloride; (f) Restoration; (g) Oral disc and dentition of Geotria australis. Abbreviations: cot, circumoral teeth; dt, oral disc teeth; gp, gular pouch; ic, intestine contents; io, infraoral lamina; ll, longitudinal lingual lamina; ll.r, right longitudinal lingual lamina; od, oral disc; of, oral fimbriae; op, oral papilla(e); so, supraoral lamina; tl, transverse lingual lamina. Wu et al. (2023).

Both species of Yanliaomyzon have gular pouches, a feature seen in 12 species of living Lamprey, as well as the Cretaceous Mesomyzon mengae, but unknown in other fossil Lampreys. This feature has been suggested to be connected to courtship displays in male Lampreys, or serving as an energy reserve during anadromous (sea-to-freshwater) migrations; seven of the extant species in which this feature is found undertake such migrations.

Also seen in both species of Yanliaomyzon is a long dorsal fin extending anteriorly until the level of the fourth gill pouch, and a a long precloacal skin fold, which extends anteriorly to the anterior branchial region.

A phylogenetic analysis recovered Yanliaomyzon as stem group Lampreys (i.e. more closely related to living Lampreys than to any other living group, but not decended from the last common ancestor of all living Lampreys). Notably, including Yanliaomyzon in the analysis led to Mesomyzon mengae also being recovered as a stem group Lamprey, where previous studies had recovered it as a member of the crown group. In this analysis all fossil Lampreys lie outside the crown group (the crown group comprises everything descended from the last common ancestor of all living members of a group), which now comprises only living species. 

In this new analysis, Geotria australis, the only member of the family Geotriidae, is recovered as the outgroup to all other Lampreys, with the genus Mordacia, with two species forming the family Mordaciidae, forming the sister group to the family Petromyzontidae (Northern Hemisphere Lampreys), which includes all other living Lampreys. This is another new interpretation, with previous analyses having suggested either that the Geotriidae and Mordaciidae are sister groups, on a separate branch to the Petromyzontidae, or that the Petromyzontidae and Geotriidae are sister groups, with the Mordaciidae being sister to the pair.

Time-calibrated phylogeny of the Cyclostomes and Lampreys. The time-tree is the all-compatible consensus tree summarized from the Bayesian total evidence dating analysis on the partitioned data. The node ages in the tree are the posterior medians, and the error bars at the nodes denote the 95% highest posterior density intervals. The shade of each circle represents the posterior probability of the corresponding clade. The colour of the branch represents the median relative evolutionary rate of the feeding mechanism characters at that branch. Abbreviations: C., Caspiomyzon; Cam., Cambrian; Carbon., Carboniferous; Dev., Devonian; En., Entosphenus; Eu., Eudontomyzon; G., Geotria; I., Ichthyomyzon; La., Lampetra; Le., Lethenteron; M., Mordacia; Ord., Ordovician; P., Petromyzon; Perm., Permian; Sil., Silurian; T., Tetrapleurodon; Y., Yanliaomyzon. Wu et al. (2023).

Yanliaomyzon occisor is the largest fossil Lamprey known to science, and would be large for a modern Lamprey. Among living Lampreys large size is associated with longer migrations, a wider range, larger clutches of eggs, and a greater tolerance for salt water. Many small Lamprey species do not feed at all after metamorphosing from their ammocoete larval stage. Based upon this, and the prevailance of anadromous migrations among Lampreys recovered as basal within the crown group by Wu et al.'s phylogenetic analysis, Yanliaomyzon occisor appears likely to have been an anadromous migratory species with a triphasic life cycle (this is known to have been the case in Mesomyzon mengae, a Cretaceous species found to be less closely related to the crown group than Yanliaomyzon occisor in the phylogenetic reconstruction).

The long dorsal fin and ribbon-like precloacal skin fold seen in both species of Yanliaomyzon also suggest that these Lampreys were powerful swimmers. Similar arrangements are seen in the European Eel, Anguilla vulgaris, and African Knifefish, Gymnarchus niloticus, both of with are capable of swimming against powerful currents, something likely to be useful in a Lamprey migrating upstream to reproduce.

Lampreys appear to have switched from a simple non-migratory life cycle lacking a separate larval stage to the modern three stage, anadromous migratory life cycle some time after the Carboniferous, and the discovery of Yanliaomyzon spp. strongly suggests that this had occurred by the Middle Jurassic. This change in lifestyle appears to have also been connected to a sharp increase in the body size of Lampreys, probably as a result of the interactions between Lampreys and a changing prey-community.

Lampreys first appeared in the Devonian, and have generally been assumed to have been either carnivorous or predatory from the outset. However, Wu et al. point out there is little evidence for such behaviour in Palaeozoic Lampreys, which are very small, lack an ammocoete larval stage, and have simply structured and tiny dentition and a small buccal cavity (the space where the glands which secrete anticoagulants are found in modern Lampreys). The oral disks of these Palaeozoic Lampreys were capable of attaching, but had little biting capacity. Furthermore, the majority of Palaeozoic Fish were covered with thick scales or amoured plates, which it is unlikely even a modern Lamprey could penetrate, and which it is highly unlikely that the much smaller and less well armed Palaeozoic Lampreys could have overcome. As an alternative, Wu et al. suggest that early Lampreys may have specialised in scraping Algae from the bodies of larger Animals, using their oral disks to stay attached when their hosts moved about. Adopting a specialist niche such as this would have enabled Lampreys to flourish in an environment where they faced competition from a large number of other Jawless Fish species, notably the Conodonts from which they are thought to have derived, and which were armed with similar feeding apparatus. This evolutionary jump could help to explain the rapid range expansion of Palaeozoic Lampreys, which were restricted to the southern polar region in the Devonian, but which had reached equatorial regions by the Late Carboniferous. 

Wu et al.'s phylogenetic reconstruction suggests that the ancestors of Mesomyzon mengae diverged from the ancestors of Yanliaomyzon spp. and modern Lampreys in the Early Jurassic, suggesting that more powerful oral disks associated with predation and parasitic behaviour had evolved by this point. This may have been linked to the rise of Teleost and Acipenseriform fish in the Early Jurassic, which typically have much thinner scales than the Gannoid Fish they supplanted, as well as the disappearance of potential competitors such as the Conodonts in the Permian and Triassic extinctions, which would have created new opportunities for Lampreys, leading to the development of more the specialized feeding apparatus and the increase in size seen in later members of the group. This increase in size would have facilitated the invasion of freshwater environments and the development of a migratory reproductive cycle.

The feeding apparatus and gut of Yanliaomyzon spp. appear similar to that of the modern carnivorous Pouched Lamprey, Geotria australis, indicating that this lifestyle had appeared by the Middle Jurassic. Wu et al. hypothesise that carnivory is the ancestral state for crown group Lampreys, and that parasitism arose as specialization derived from this, the reverse of the previously assumed scenario. The adaptation to a carnivorous lifestyle would have provided Lampreys with a high energy diet, enabling the evolution of larger body sizes, and longer migrations.

Modern Lampreys have an anti-tropical distribution, found in temperate and sub-arctic waters in both hemispheres, north and south of the 30° parallel and the 20°C isotherm. This preference for cool waters was also seen in the earliest Lampreys, and while the group have at times moved into more equatorial waters, this appears to have coincided with cooler intervals in the geological record. 

Timetree of the Petromyzontiformes projected with paleotemperature curve since the Devonian and biogeographic reconstructions of the group. Wu et al. (2023).

Lampreys were present in palaeoequatorial regions of Euramerica during the Late Carboniferous Ice Age, and all known Mesozoic fossils are restricted to temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere. The size and morphology of these Mesozoic Lampreys suggests that they were probably stronger swimmers than even the most widespread current species, such as the Pouched Lamprey, Geotria australis, and Pacific Lamprey, Entosphenus tridentatus. Both of these predatory Lampreys are capable of following shoals of Fish for long distances, and reaching considerable depths; Pacific Lampreys are typically found at depths of 0-500 m, but the maximum depth at which the species has been recorded is 1485 m. A Lamprey capable of sustained swimming at such depths would be capable of migrating across the equator without ever having to enter warm water.

Crown group Lampreys were assumed to have arisen in the Southern Hemisphere between 280 and 220 million years ago, before the breakup of Pangea, and then Gondwana, leading to the anti-tropical distribution of the group. Wu et al.'s study suggests that the crown group is younger than previously thought, and probably arose in the Southern Hemisphere, with a subsequent migration of some groups back into the Northern Hemisphere. Wu et al. suggest that the crown group may have appeared around the end of the Cenomanian-Turonian Thermal Maximum, an event likely to have wiped out the stem group Lampreys, with the subsequent migration of Lampreys back into the Northern Hemisphere having occurred before the Palaeocene-Eocene-Thermal-Maximum, an event which would have excluded from lower latitudes. 

Crown group Northern Hemisphere Lampreys, Petromyzontidae, are thought to have arisen in the late Oligocene in western North America, and subsequently spread around the hemisphere following the development of ice caps in Greenland and the Arctic Sea, enabling them to spread to eastern North America and then Europe. The absence of such cold water close to the major landmasses of the Southern Hemisphere has led to the uneven species richness in the two hemispheres.

Wu et al. suggest that the morphology and lifestyle of Lampreys is not as conservative as previously thought, and that the group underwent a major evolutionary leap in the Jurassic, including a significant increase in size and swimming ability and the modification of the feeding apparatus into a more modern configuration. Crown group Lampreys are suggested to be much younger than previously hypothesized, and to have arisen in the Southern Hemisphere rather than the Northern Hemisphere, as previously thought.

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Sunday, 12 August 2018

Caihong juji: A new species of Deinonychosaur from the Middle-to-Late Jurassic Yanliao Biota of Hebei Province, China.

The Yanliao Biota of northeastern China outcrops across much of  western Liaoning, northern Hebei, and southeastern Inner Mongolia provinces, providing a series of deposits with exceptional preservation laid down over a period of about 10 million years in terrestrial settings. These deposits include the Daohugou phase (about 168–164 million years ago) and the Oxfordian Linglongta phase (164–159 million years ago). These fossils provide a valuable insight into a variety of emerging taxa in across the boundary between the Middle and Late Jurassic, including Insects, Mammals and Paravian Dinosaurs, the group which includes Dromaeosaurs, Troodontids and Birds.

In a paper published in the journal Nature Communications on 15 January 2018, Dongyu Hu of the Paleontological Museum of Liaoning at Shenyang Normal University, Julia Clarke of the Department of Geological Sciences and Integrated Bioscience at the University of Texas at Austin, Chad Eliason, also of the Department of Geological Sciences and Integrated Bioscience at the University of Texas at Austin, and of the Integrative Research Center at the Field Museum of Natural History, Rui Qiu, also of the Paleontological Museum of Liaoning at Shenyang Normal University, Quanguo Li of the State Key Laboratory of Biogeology and Environmental Geology at the China University of Geosciences, Matthew Shawkey of the Evolution and Optics of Nanostructures Group at the University of Ghent, Cuilin Zhao, again of the Paleontological Museum of Liaoning at Shenyang Normal University, Liliana D’Alba also of the Evolution and Optics of Nanostructures Group at the University of Ghent, Jinkai Jiang, once again of the Paleontological Museum of Liaoning at Shenyang Normal University, and Xing Xu of the Key Laboratory of Vertebrate Evolution and Human Origins at the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, describe a new species of Paravian Dinosaur from the Late Jurassic Tiaojishan Formation of northern Hebei.

The new species is named Caihong juji, where 'Caihong' means 'rainbow' and 'juji' means 'big crest'. It is described from a single, almost complete skeleton and associated plumage preserved as part and counterpart on a split slab. The specimen is estimated to have been about 400 mm in length, and to have weighed about 475 g when it was alive, and is thought to have been an adult. It had a pair of prominent crests on its lacrimal bones (the bone that joins the nose to the eye-socket in Humans, and the hind-part of the snout in Theropod Dinosaurs), something very unusual in Paravians. Caihong juji is assessed to have been a Deinonychosaur on the basis of its anatomy (i.e. the sub-group of Paravians that includes Dromaeosaurs ans Troodontids, but not Birds.

Caihong juji. Photographs of the slab (a) and counter slab (b) and line drawing (c) of the specimen based on both slabs. Photograph (d) and line drawing (e) of a composite of the rostrum of the skull and mandible exposed on the counter slab and the post-rostrum cranium exposed on the slab. Arrows indicate lacrimal crests. Question mark indicates uncertain identification. Scale bars: 10 cm in (a)–(c), 1 cm in (d) and (e). Abreviations aof, antorbital fenestra; cav, caudal vertebra; cev, cervical vertebra; dr, dorsal rib; dv, dorsal vertebra; ect, ectopterygoid; emf, external mandibular fenestra; en, external naris; f, feather; fu, furcula; ga, gastralia; hy, hyoid; il, ilium; is, ischium; la, left angular; lar, left articular; lc, left coracoid; lcr, lacrimal crest; ld, left dentary; lf, left frontal; lfe, left femur; lh, left humerus; lj, left jugal; ll, left lacrimal; lma, left maxilla; lm, left manus; ln, left nasal; lp, left pes; lpa, left palatine; lpo, left postorbital; lq, left quadrate; lqj, left quadratojugal; lr, left radius; ls, left scapula; lsp, left splenial; lsa, left surangular; lsq, left squamosal; lt, left tibiotarsus; lu, left ulna; ma, mandible; mf, maxillary fenestra; o, orbit; p, parietal; pm, premaxilla; pt, pterygoid; pu, pubis; rar, right articular; rc, right coracoid; rd, right dentary; rfe, right femur; rh, right humerus; rm, right manus; rp, right pes; rpra, right prearticular; rq, right quadrate; rr, right radius; rs, right scapula; rt, right tibiotarsus; ru, right ulna; scl, sclerotic bones; sk, skull; sy, synsacrum. Hu et al. (2018).

Much of the plumage of Caihong juji is exceptionally well preserved, retaining the microstructure of the melanosomes (pigment cells). Comparison of these cells to those of modern Birds leads Hu et al. to conclude that this Jurassic Dinosaur had brightly coloured iridescent plumage.

Platelet-like nanostructures in Caihong juji and melanosomes in iridescent extant feathers. (a)–(d) Fossilized nanostructures from Caihong feathers preserved as molds in a neck feather (a) and three-dimensional preservation in a neck feather, with SEM stage rotated 45° to show 3D platelet morphology; (b) a back feather with SEM stage at 0° (c) and a neck feather showing nanostructure packing; (d), (e) Anna’s Hummingbird, Calypte anna, showing overlapping melanosomes within a feather barbule; (f) White-tailed Starfrontlet, Coeligena phalerata, showing stacking and interior morphology (air bubbles) of melanosomes in a feather barbule; (g) Black-tailed Trainbearer, Lesbia victoriae, showing exterior surface and morphology of isolated melanosomes in a feather barb; (h) Moustached Treeswift, Hemiprocne mystacea, showing densely packed melanosomes in the barbule of a crown feather. Inset in (d) illustrates 3D stacking of platelet-shaped nanostructures. All scale bars are 1000 nm. Hu et al. (2018).

See also...

https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2018/02/almas-ukhaa-new-species-of-troodontid.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2017/12/ostromia-crassipes-second-species-of.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2016/02/boreonykus-certekorum-new-species-of.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2015/12/partial-dromaeosaur-remains-from-early.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2015/10/dakotaraptor-steini-giant-feathered.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2015/07/zhenyuanlong-suni-large-feathered.html
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Saturday, 14 June 2014

Winter Crane Flies from the Middle Jurassic Jiulongshan Formation of Inner Mongolia.

Winter Crane Flies (Trichoceridae) are large True Flies (Diptera) with a (slightly erroneous) reputation for being tolerant of cold conditions. In fact a few species are capable of remaining active in winter, with some even mating and laying eggs beneath snow cover, but other members of the group are no more tolerant of cold conditions than most insects.

In a paper published in the journal ZooKeys on 28 May 2014, Fei Dong, Chungkun Shih and Dong Ren of the College of Life Sciences at Capital Normal University, describe two new species of Winter Crane Fly from the Jiulongshan Formation of Inner Mongolia, both of which are placed in the previously described genus Eotrichocera, which has previously been used to describe fossils from the Middle Jurassic of Inner Mongolia and south-central Siberia.

The Jiulongshan Formation outcrops around Daohugou Village, and has produced a large number of exceptionally well preserved Insects from what is commonly known as the Daohugou Lagerstätte, part of the Yanliao Biota. The fossils are thought to be late Middle Jurassic in origin, from the boundary between the Bathonian and Callovian eras, making them about 165 million years old. This provides a valuable insight into insect diversity in the Jurassic, before the appearance and rapid rise to dominance of Angiosperms (Flowering Plants), an event which radically reshaped Insect faunas.

The first species is named Eotrichocera longensis, in reference to its long legs. It is described from two female specimens about 13 mm in length.

Eotrichocera longensis, both specimens. Scale bars are 1 mm. Fei et al. (2014).

The second species is named Eotrichocera amabilis, meaning ‘lovely’ in Latin. It is described from two specimens, one female and one of uncertain sex, about 5.8 mm in length.

Eotrichocera amabilis, both specimens. Scale bars are 1 mm. Fei et al. (2014).

See also…


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