Paleobiological Insights Into the Meaning of Coevolution (Cretaceous/Gracilaridae/Nepticulidae/Magnolidae/Platanoid) C

Paleobiological Insights Into the Meaning of Coevolution (Cretaceous/Gracilaridae/Nepticulidae/Magnolidae/Platanoid) C

Proc. Nati. Acad. Sci. USA Vol. 91, pp. 12278-12282, December 1994 Evolution Ninety-seven million years of angiosperm-insect association: Paleobiological insights into the meaning of coevolution (Cretaceous/Gracilaridae/Nepticulidae/Magnolidae/platanoid) C. C. LABANDEIRA*t, D. L. DILCHERt, D. R. DAVIS§, AND D. L. WAGNER¶ Departments of *Paleobiology and §Entomology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20560; tDepartment of Natural Science, Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611-1380; and fDepartment of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269 Contributed by D. L. Dilcher, August 8, 1994 ABSTRACT From well preserved leaf damage of the mid- angiosperm hosts and their potentially coevolved insect Cretaceous Dakota Flora (97 million years ago), three distinc- herbivores may reveal older interactions (23), an alternative tive, insect-mediated feeding traces have been identified and and more direct approach is the fossil record. Recent interest assigned to two extant genera and one subfamily. These taxa and published work in the fossil history of insect-mediated are the leaf miners Stigmella and Ectoedemia of the Nepticul- damage on angiosperms have provided critical physical ev- idae and Phyllocnistinae of the Gracillariidae. These fossils idence that directly links behaviorally stereotyped and tax- indicate that within 25 million years of early angiosperm onomically identifiable damage to modem host taxa that are radiation, the organs of woody dicots already were exploited in still exploited today by the same herbivore clades (12, 14, 24). intricate and modern ways by insect herbivores. For Ectoe- In principle, the direct evidence of fossil plant-insect inter- demia and its platanoid host, we document 97 million years of actions can address neontologically based hypotheses re- continuity for a plant-insect interaction. The early occurrence garding the geochronologic duration, host specificity, and during the mid-Cretaceous of diverse and extensive herbivory biogeographic distribution of modern angiosperm-insect as- on woody angiosperms may be associated with the innovation sociations. In this context, we report fossil evidence from of deciduousness, in which a broadleafed angiosperm provided insect-mediated plant damage from the Dakota Formation, an an efficient, but disposable, photosynthetic organ that with- angiosperm-dominated flora deposited -25 million years into stood the increased cost of additional insect herbivory. More- the radiation of angiosperms (15, 25). over, the group represented in this study, the leaf-mining Lepidoptera, exhibits a wide range of subordinal taxonomic Source of the Data: The Dakota Flora differentiation and includes the Gracillariidae, a member ofthe most derived lepidopteran suborder, the Ditrysia. Ditrysian Our data were collected from the Dakota Formation of presence during the mid-Cretaceous, in addition to lepi- earliest Cenomanian age (97 Ma), which originated from three dopteran body-fossil evidence from Early Cretaceous and Late warm-temperate sites representing coastal swamp, flood Jurassic deposits, suggests that the radiation of major lepi- plain lake, and ox-bow channel deposits (25). These three dopteran lineages probably occurred during the Late Jurassic sites comprise facies occurring on a flood plain, near a delta on a gymnosperm-dominated flora. that faced a westward midcontinental seaway extending from the Arctic Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico (25-27). The bulk Considerable recent attention has focused on the myriad flora from the Dakota Formation is undoubtedly the most associations between the two most diverse clades of extant diverse mid-Cretaceous flora known, representing >400 spe- macroscopic organisms-angiosperms and insects. In spite cies of angiosperms (28, 29) for which extensive, unbiased of this abundance of primary data (1, 2), few investigations collections have been made. Material from three Dakota have documented the macroevolutionary history of an- deposits in Kansas and Nebraska (the Braun Ranch, Rose giosperm-insect associations. Most studies involving the Creek, and Hoisington localities) contains excellently pre- timing of origin of angiosperm-insect associations, particu- served foliar material (25, 27-29), some of which contains larly those of leaf-mining taxa, posit originations of host- damage by insects of varied life habits. Although previous specific insect herbivory during the Late Cenozoic (3-5) and, studies of the Dakota flora have documented early evidence to a lesser degree, Early Cenozoic (6-8). Less commonly for insect dietary guilds and functional feeding groups during explicit hypotheses place essentially modern angiosperm- the early angiosperm radiation (13, 14, 25, 30), our evaluation insect associations during the Cretaceous (9-11). Currently of insect damage provides taxonomic identifications at the there is limited documentation ofinsect herbivores during the genus level. In addition, floral structure in the Dakota Flora 40 million year Barremian to Turonian interval ofangiosperm suggest a variety of pollinators (31-33). radiation (12-14) during which angiosperms became ecolog- The Dakota Flora consists predominantly ofplesiomorphic ically dominant in most terrestrial habitats (15, 16). This dicotyledonous angiosperms (15, 25, 34) and nonangiosperm general absence of evidence for angiosperm-insect associa- taxa such as conifers (16, 34) and ferns (29). Although Rose tions in the Cretaceous is attributable to (i) a lack ofadequate Creek has been the only locality in which angiosperm fossil collections and (ii) selective analyses of potentially megafossils have been intensively investigated (25, 29), pre- associated host and herbivore clades that emphasize apo- liminary data from other localities indicate that the general morphic, recently derived, members of highly diverse en- floristic conclusions reached for Rose Creek are consistent compassing clades (17-19) that extend to the Early Creta- with the other sites as well. The most abundant and diverse ceous or the earlier Mesozoic (20-22). While the possibility components at Rose Creek are the orders Magnoliales, remains that selection of appropriate, basal clades of both Laurales, and Illiciales (25) of the subclass Magnoliidae. Notably present as insect host plants are lauralean leaf The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" Abbreviation: Ma, million years ago. in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact. tTo whom reprint requests should be addressed. 12278 Downloaded by guest on September 26, 2021 Evolution: Labandeira et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 91 (1994) 12279 species assigned to modem Chloranthaceae and Lauraceae ditrysian lepidopteran family Gracillariidae are well repre- and a few leaf species referable to mosaic combinations of sented. The latter mines could have been produced by several modem lauralean families. Other Rose Creek plants Phyllocnistis or a closely related phyliocnistine genus (36). include two members of unknown ordinal affiliation within These leaf mines are preserved as internal excavations of the Rosidae and four angiosperms that remain unassignable parenchymatic and epidermal tissues in leaf compressions. to subclass (25). Additional heavily herbivorized plants in- They contain life-history detail of the larval miner, including clude from Braun Ranch and Hoisington an undescribed oviposition site; fecal pellet distributional pattern; discrete, platanoid, a member of lower Hamamelidae, and at Hoising- instar-related enlargement of mine width; and size, shape, ton the pinnately compound Sapindopsis, probably a primi- and internal structure ofthe preemergence larval or pupation tive member of the Rosidae (25, 35). chamber. The Nepticulidae is a near-cosmopolitan family of -600 Modern Insect Genera Associated with the Dakota Flora described species of tiny monotrysian moths whose larvae feed on solid-tissue parenchyma as leaf miners or rarely in From an ongoing and extensive examination of dicotyledon- petiole galls, bark, and buds (37-40). Nepticulid species ous angiosperm plant damage from the Dakota flora, three exhibit narrow host specificities, feeding principally on morphotypes of diagnostic leaf mines have been identified woody Hamamelidae, Rosidae, and Dilleniidae (40, 41). and are assigned to modem taxa (Fig. 1). Although other Ectoedemia and Stigmella are taxonomically and autecolog- apparent lepidopteran leaf mines are present, of the distinc- ically diverse and are assigned to distinct tribes within the tive leafmines, Stigmella and Ectoedemia ofthe monotrysian Nepticulidae (41, 42). Stigmella is the most speciose nepti- lepidopteran family Nepticulidae and Phyllocnistinae of the culid genus and exhibits the widest geographical distribution FIG. 1. Leaf-mining Lepidop- - ~~~~tera, from the mid-Cretaceous (97 Ma) Dakota Formation of Kansas. (a-d) The leaf-mining nepticulid Ectoedemia on. undescribed pla- _! Insatanoid rc.()Elreetohosts. (a) Leaf mine at left basalfork ofprimary veins ofspec- imen (UF12701) from the Braun Ranch Locality. (b) Enlargement of same mine. (c) Detail of same mine showing serpentine early- mnstar portion. (d) Ectoedemia on platanoid specimen UF7255 from the Hoisington locality. (e-h) The leaf-mining nepticulid Stigmella on dicot hosts. (e) Stigmella on Pan- - demophyllum kvacekii

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    5 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us