Modern hydrophilid clades present and widespread in the Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous (Coleoptera: Hydrophiloidea: Hydrophilidae)
Author
Fikáček, Martin
Author
Prokin, Alexander
Author
Yan, Evgeny
Author
Yue, Yanli
Author
Wang, Bo
Author
Ren, Dong
Author
Beattie, Robert
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2014
2014-04-30
170
4
710
734
http://doi.wiley.com/10.1111/zoj.12114
journal article
10.1111/zoj.12114
0024-4082
10273948
BAISSALARVA
GEN. NOV.
Type
species:
Baissalarva hydrobioides
sp. nov.
, by present designation.
Time range:
Early Cretaceous.
Diagnosis:
Labrum fused with clypeus; labroclypeus with five large teeth with slightly more isolated left lateral-most one (
Figs 3E
,
6B
); epistomal lobes low, symmetrical (
Fig. 3D–E
); occipital foramen situated dorsally (
Figs 3E
,
6A
); mandible with three retinacular teeth (
Figs 3D
,
6C
); prothorax completely sclerotized dorsally (
Figs 3C, F
,
6A, D
); meso- and metathorax with large transverse sclerites (
Figs 3C, F
,
6A, D
); abdominal segments largely membranous, with small dorsal circular sclerites only (
Figs 3C, F
,
6A, D
); tracheal system with a pair of large tracheal trunks (
Figs 3C, F
,
6A, D
).
Etymology:
The generic name consists of the name of the
type
locality in which the genus was found (Baissa) and the ending
-larva
indicating that it represents the larval stage. Feminine.
Family assignment:
The combination of dorsally situated occipital foramen of the head (present due to the hyperprognathous head allowing it to hold the prey above the water surface when it is processed preorally) and the anterior margin of the head bearing series of teeth on labroclypeus reliably assigns the fossils to the family
Hydrophilidae
. The family assignment is also supported by the general habitus, which closely corresponds to those of larvae of extant
Hydrophilidae
(see, e.g.
Fig. 6E–H
), and by the presence of massive tracheal trunks in the abdomen (an adaptation for breathing atmospheric oxygen in submerged larvae).
Results of phylogenetic analysis:
The unconstrained analysis resulted in seven most parsimonious trees 207 steps in length. Their strict consensus tree (
Fig. 4A
) is largely unresolved, but
Baissalarva
is still recognized to form a group with all included genera of the
Hydrobiusini
and the hydrophiline genus
Sternolophus
based on the nasale with five teeth and the left-most one distinctly separated from the other. In the constrained analysis using the molecules-based backbone tree, a single most parsimonious tree of length 240 steps was found (
Fig. 4B
).
Baissalarva
is placed as a sister taxon to the extant representatives of the
Hydrobiusini
based on characters of the nasale.
Comparison with other genera:
The presence of five teeth of labroclypeus with the left one slightly more separated from the others is very characteristic for the modern larvae of the tribe
Hydrobiusini
and the hydrophiline genus
Sternolophus
Solier, 1834
(Archangelsky, 1997, 2004;
Minoshima & Hayashi, 2011a
, b, 2012b). The form of the nasale (i.e. characters 5 and 6) is also responsible for grouping
Baissalarva
with these taxa in both phylogenetic analyses performed. Comparison of
Baissalarva
with modern representatives of the
Hydrobiusini
(
Fig. 6E, G
) and
Sternolophus
(
Fig. 6F, H
) shows that the fossil resembles the hydrobiusine larvae (mandibles wide with wider retinacular teeth, head widely quadratic, anterior margin of the occipital foramen arcuate, cervical sclerites wide, abdominal segments 1–8 with two pairs of isolated sclerites). At the same time, it clearly differs from the larva of
Sternolophus
, which has long slender mandibles and retinacular teeth, elongate head, triangular anterior margin of the occipital foramen, very narrow cervical sclerites, and mesonotum with both pairs of tergites fused). All these characters are shared by all other genera of the
Hydrophilini
except
Hydrophilus
Geoffroy, 1762
. Comparison of the fossils with modern larvae hence corresponds well with the results of our constrained analysis, and we consider
Baissalarva
as belonging to the tribe
Hydrobiusini
. Knowledge of the extant larvae of the
Hydrobiusini
is still rather limited and the fossils lack the generic diagnostic characters (chaetotaxy, detailed morphology of mouthparts and antenna). For this reason we prefer to assign the fossil to a new fossil genus,
Baissalarva
gen. nov.