• New fossil discovery shows 50 million-ye

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Mon Jun 15 21:30:34 2020
    New fossil discovery shows 50 million-year-old Canada-Australia
    connection

    Date:
    June 15, 2020
    Source:
    Simon Fraser University
    Summary:
    The discovery of a tiny insect fossil in Western Canada is
    unearthing big questions about the global movement of animals across
    deep time. The fossil, estimated to be 50 million years old, is
    the latest in a pattern of discoveries that are leading experts to
    contemplate a Canada-Australia connection not previously considered.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    The discovery of a tiny insect fossil is unearthing big questions about
    the global movement of animals and the connection to changes in climate
    and shifting continents across deep time. The fossil, estimated to be
    50 million years old, was found in rocks near the city of Kamloops,
    British Columbia, but today its relatives live exclusively in Australia.


    ==========================================================================
    The finding is the latest in a pattern of discoveries that are leading
    experts to contemplate a Canada-Australia connection not previously
    considered.

    Paleontologists Bruce Archibald of Simon Fraser University and the Royal British Columbia Museum and Vladimir Makarkin of the Russian Academy
    of Sciences in Vladivostok published their findings in The Canadian Entomologist.

    According to Makarkin, the fossil is part of the "split-footed lacewing" family. Little is known about this group over the 66-million-years
    following the extinction of the dinosaurs. "These fossils are rare," he
    says. "This is only the fourth one found from this time-span world-wide,
    and it's the most completely preserved. It adds important information to
    our knowledge of how they became modern." The paleontologists identified
    the fossil by the characteristic network of veins covering its wings. They emphasize that fossils like the new lacewing species help in understanding large-scale patterns of the modern distribution of life across the globe.

    Previous fossil insects of this age found in B.C. and neighbouring
    Washington have shown connections with Pacific-coastal Russia to the
    west and with Europe to the east -- patterns that are not surprising
    since the northern continents were connected then.

    "Fifty million years ago, sea levels were lower, exposing more land
    between North America and Asia, and the Atlantic Ocean had not widened,
    leaving Europe and North America still joined across high latitudes,"
    says Archibald. He explains that the far-north experienced warmer climates
    then as well, helping a variety of animals and plants to disperse freely between northern continents.



    ==========================================================================
    The Australian connection is more puzzling though, as there is no such
    clear land connection. That continent was closer to Antarctica then and
    farther from Asia than today, leaving formidable ocean barriers for life
    to disperse between it and Canada's west coast.

    This lacewing joins other insect fossils from B.C. and Washington whose
    modern relatives only live in the Australian region. These include
    bulldog ants, a family of termites, and a kind of parasitoid wasp.

    Archibald says that "a pattern is emerging that we don't quite understand
    yet, but has interesting implications." The researchers suggest that
    the answer might be connected to climate. The forests of the ancient
    British Columbian temperate upland where this lacewing lived had very
    mild winters, in fact, probably without frost days.

    The climate of modern Australia shares these mild winters even in
    temperate regions. "It could be that these insect groups are today
    restricted to regions of the world where climates in key ways resemble
    those 50 million years ago in the far western Canadian mountains,"
    says Archibald.

    Archibald and Makarkin emphasise that it's important to understand the
    little things in order to appreciate the big picture. "The more we know
    about these insects, the more we can piece together the history of how
    climate and the movement of continents have shaped global patterns of
    the distributions of life that we see in our modern world," says Makarkin.

    "To understand where we are today and where we may be going with the
    big changes that we are seeing in global climates, we need to understand
    what's happened in the deep past."

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Simon_Fraser_University. Note:
    Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. S. Bruce Archibald, Vladimir N. Makarkin. A new genus and species of
    split-footed lacewings (Neuroptera) from the early Eocene
    of western Canada and revision of the subfamily affinities of
    Mesozoic Nymphidae.

    The Canadian Entomologist, 2020; 152 (3): 269 DOI:
    10.4039/tce.2020.10 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/06/200615140910.htm

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