咨询与建议

看过本文的还看了

相关文献

该作者的其他文献

文献详情 >Early Jurassic Coleopterans fr... 收藏

Early Jurassic Coleopterans from the Mintaja Insect Locality,Western Australia

Early Jurassic Coleopterans from the Mintaja Insect Locality,Western Australia

作     者:Sarah K.MARTIN 

作者机构:School of GeosciencesBuilding 28Monash UniversityClayton Victoria 3800Australia 

出 版 物:《Acta Geologica Sinica(English Edition)》 (地质学报(英文版))

年 卷 期:2010年第84卷第4期

页      面:925-953页

核心收录:

学科分类:070903[理学-古生物学与地层学(含:古人类学)] 0709[理学-地质学] 07[理学] 

基  金:funded by a Monash University Research Scholarship provided to the author 

主  题:Coleoptera Early Jurassic Mintaja insect locality Western Australia 

摘      要:Beetles (Coleoptera) are the most common insects recovered from the Lower Jurassic Mintaja insect locality of Western Australia, with over half of the fossils recorded from this site being isolated coleopteran elytra. A range of partial beetle bodies and other isolated beetle sclerites have also been recovered from the locality; much of this material is taxonomically unidenitifiable due to its disarticulation and poor preservation. A number of the Mintaja coleopterans are assigned to the archostematan family Ommatidae, including Zygadenia westraliensis (Riek, 1968) comb. nov, previously placed in the morphogenus Mesothoris, and an unnamed species of Tetraphalerus. Also recorded is a new species of elaterid, Lithomerus wunda sp. nov., along with other fragments likely attributable to the same family. The remaining material is assigned into morphospecies, separated primarily on preserved body parts - specifically, there are three morphospecies based on partially articulated coleopteran bodies, two morphospecies based on isolated head capsules, three morphospecies based on isolated thoracic sclerites, three morphospecies based on isolated abdominal sclerites, and 13 morphospecies based on isolated elytra. Overall, the ecology of these fossils is difficult to interpret due to poor preservation, although some of the beetles were likely aquatic, and the Ommatidae and Elateridae were both likely xylophilous. There is a strong similarity between the Mintaja coleopterans and those from the Late Triassic Denmark Hill locality of Queensland, though many of these similarities are based on morphotaxa and may be superficial in nature. Of the species that have been assigned to named taxa, all are generally typical of the Late Mesozoic worldwide, with Zygadenia, Tetraphalerus and Lithomerus all long-ranging, cosmopolitan genera.

读者评论 与其他读者分享你的观点

用户名:未登录
我的评分