PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Natural History Museum, London, yields remarkable new beetle specimens from Brazil

2014-01-23
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Joseph Parker
jp2488@columbia.edu
Pensoft Publishers
Natural History Museum, London, yields remarkable new beetle specimens from Brazil

A visit to the Natural History Museum, London, yielded an unexpected surprise for Dr. Joseph Parker, a UK biologist based in New York at Columbia University and the American Museum of Natural History.

Among the 22,000 drawers of specimens that comprise the Coleoptera (beetle) collection housed in the Department of Entomology, was a new rove beetle genus collected during the 1990s in Manaus, a region of the Brazilian Amazon. The new genus is described in the open access journal ZooKeys.

The beetles, which measure only 3 mm in length, have a remarkable sexual dimorphism: the male has large eyes with over one hundred eye facets, whereas the female eyes have a paltry 12 facets. The male also has large flight wings, while the female has no wings at all. It's likely that the male does most of the searching for mates, while the female doesn't develop large eyes or wings and invests instead in egg production.

The beetles belong to a group of rove beetles called Pselaphinae, a "massive group of tiny beetles, amongst the commonest beetles you can find in rainforest leaf litter" according to Parker, a Pselaphinae specialist. "We know of more than 9,000 species of these beetles—that's about as many species as there are birds. The big differences are that only about six or seven people worldwide work on these beetles, and unlike birds, many thousands more of these beetles await discovery, and unfortunately almost nothing is known about their ecology".

Parker, who is also a developmental biologist, named the new genus "Morphogenia" after "morphogens"—a kind of signalling molecule that functions during animal development to control the size, shape and form of organs.

The beetles were found at the Biological Dynamics of Forest Fragments Project. This vast ecological experiment was set up by the Smithsonian Institution and Brazil's National Institute for Amazonian Research (INPA) to investigate how forest fragmentation affects communities of plants and animals.

"With so few people working on groups of organisms like this, it's hard to know what role they play in nature. The fact there's so many species, and they're so abundant, suggests they're doing something important." added Parker.



INFORMATION:



Original source

Parker J (2014) Morphogenia: a new genus of the Neotropical tribe Jubini (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Pselaphinae) from the Brazilian Amazon. ZooKeys 373: 57–66. doi: 10.3897/zookeys.373.6788

Additional Information

http://www.nature.com/news/forest-ecology-splinters-of-the-amazon-1.12816



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Death row confessions and the last meal test of innocence

2014-01-23
Can last meals reveal more about individuals on death row than their taste preference? Some have argued there is significance embedded in death row last meal decisions. Famously, Ricky Ray Rector asked to save his untouched ...

2 proteins compete for 1 port on a growth factor; 1 promotes metastasis, the other blocks it

2014-01-23
HOUSTON – Consider two drivers, each with ...

The $125 billion question: How will the ACA affect cancer survivors?

2014-01-23
In 2010, the total cost of cancer care in the United States reached $125 billion. Globally, the economic toll from cancer is nearly 20 percent higher than the leading cause of death, ...

Looking for a 'superhabitable' world? Try Alpha Centauri B, says Astrobiology Journal

2014-01-23
New Rochelle, January 23, 2014—The search for extraterrestrial life extends far beyond Earth's solar system, looking for planets or moons outside the ...

Better eating habits, not bad economy, stabilized obesity rates

2014-01-23
All those people who've been telling us for years that we should eat more healthy foods and cut our calories – stop, take a moment, and celebrate. It appears that we actually ...

Scripps Florida scientists find regulator of amyloid plaque buildup in Alzheimer's disease

2014-01-23
JUPITER, FL – January 23, 2014 – Scientists from the Florida campus of The Scripps Research Institute have identified a critical regulator of a molecule deeply involved ...

Physical activity significantly extends lives of cancer survivors

2014-01-23
MAYWOOD, Il. – Physical activity significantly extends the lives of male cancer survivors, a new study of 1,021 men has found. During the period while the ...

NIH scientists map gene changes driving tumors in common pediatric soft-tissue cancer

2014-01-23
Scientists have mapped the genetic changes that drive tumors in rhabdomyosarcoma, a pediatric soft-tissue cancer, and found that the disease is characterized ...

A new wrinkle in the control of waves

2014-01-23
CAMBRIDGE, Mass-- Flexible, layered materials textured with nanoscale wrinkles could provide a new way of controlling the wavelengths and distribution ...

Analysis indicates that North and tropical Atlantic warming affects Antarctic climate

2014-01-23
The gradual warming of the North and tropical Atlantic Ocean is contributing to climate change in Antarctica, a team of ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Enhancing ocean wind observation accuracy: New rain correction approach for FY-3E WindRAD

New immobilization strategy enables reliable surface plasmon resonance analysis of membrane proteins

Single organic molecule triggers Kondo effect in molecular-scale “Kondo box”

Drug toxicity predicted by differences between preclinical models and humans

Behind the numbers: The growing mental health crisis among international students in America

Radiative coupled evaporation cooling hydrogel for above‑ambient heat dissipation and flame retardancy

Constructing double heterojunctions on 1T/2H‑MoS2@Co3S4 electrocatalysts for regulating Li2O2 formation in lithium‑oxygen batteries

Massively parallel implementation of nonlinear functions using an optical processor

Electrohydrodynamics pump and machine learning enable portable, high-performance excimer laser

UniSA leads national pilot to improve medication safety in aged care

Engineered biochar emerges as a powerful, affordable tool to combat water pollution

City of Hope appoints leading lung cancer expert Dr. Christine M. Lovly to head national thoracic oncology program

Green space to fewer hospitalizations for mental health

Supervised exercise improves strength and physical performance in patients with advanced breast cancer

NIH award to explore improved delivery systems for school-based substance use prevention and treatment programs

Woodpeckers grunt like tennis stars when drilling

International research team awarded €10 million ERC Synergy Grant to revolutionize drug delivery

Research Spotlight: State-of-the-art 7 Tesla MRI reveals how the human brain anticipates and regulates the body’s needs

Rice and Houston Methodist researchers to study brain-implant interface with Dunn Foundation award

OU biochemists lead global hunt for new antibiotics

October research news from the Ecological Society of America

Kinase atlas uncovers hidden layers of cell signaling regulation

Texas Tech scientists develop novel acceleration technique for crop creation

Worcester Polytechnic Institute to lead $5.2 million state-funded effort to build Central Massachusetts BioHub

China commands 47% of remote sensing research, while U.S. produces just 9%, NYU Tandon study reveals

Grocery store records reveal London food deserts

Hotter than your average spa bath: Extreme warming of Amazon lakes in 2023

Genetic variants fine-tune grain dormancy and crop resilience in barley

Cosmic dust record reveals Arctic ice varied with atmospheric warming, not ocean heat

Mechanical shear forces can trigger gas bubble formation in magmas

[Press-News.org] Natural History Museum, London, yields remarkable new beetle specimens from Brazil