(Press-News.org) Newly discovered insect fossils are so small they can barely be seen by the human eye but have been preserved in an “extraordinary” way.
Published in the journal Palaeobiodiversity and Palaeoenvironments, a new study reveals rare whitefly insect fossils have been found in Miocene age crater lake sediments at Hindon Maar, near Dunedin.
Adult whiteflies are tiny insects about 3mm in size, smaller if they are immature.
The fossils found at Hindon Maar are about 1.5mm by 1.25mm and have been preserved in the position they lived and died, attached to the underside of a fossil leaf.
Black with an oval-shaped body, they have some similarities to modern-day whiteflies – such as the shape and colour – but differ in that all the segments of the body are distinctly defined by deep sutures.
Co-author Dr Uwe Kaulfuss, of the University of Göttingen in Germany and former postdoctoral fellow in the University of Otago’s Department of Geology, discovered the tiny fossils during an excavation at Hindon earlier this year.
“Fossils of adult whitefly insects are not uncommon, but it takes extraordinary circumstances for the puparia – the protective shell the insect emerges from – to become fossilised,” Dr Kaulfuss says.
“Some 15 million years ago, the leaf with the puparia must have become detached from a tree, blown into the small lake and sank to the deep lake floor to be covered by sediment and become fossilised. It must have happened in rapid succession as the tiny insect fossils are exquisitely preserved.
“The new genus and species described in our study reveals for the first time that whitefly insects were an ecological component in ancient forests on the South Island.”
Study co-author Emeritus Professor Daphne Lee, of Otago’s Department of Geology, says they add to the expanding insect fauna revealed in the maar.
“It was difficult to see much with the naked eye but once the fossils were under a microscope, we could see the amazing detail,” she says.
“The fact that they are still in life position on the leaf is incredible and extremely rare. These little fossils are the first of their kind to be found in New Zealand and only the third example of such fossil puparia known globally.
“Until about 20 years ago, the total number of insects in the country older than the Ice Ages was seven and now we have 750. Almost all are housed in the Otago Geology Department collections.
“New discoveries such as these from fossil sites in Otago mean we’ve gone from knowing almost nothing about the role played by insects to a new appreciation of their importance in understanding New Zealand’s past biodiversity and the history of our forest ecosystems.”
Professor Lee says while most people are interested in big fossils – large charismatic ones – most animals in forests are insects.
“There are 14,000 insects in New Zealand and 90 per cent are found nowhere else in the world,” she says.
“Discovery of these minute fossils tells us this group of insects has been in Aotearoa New Zealand for at least 15 million years. This provides a well-dated calibration point for molecular phylogenetic studies.”
Other small fossils new to science have also been found at Otago sites this year, including the first dancefly, cranefly, phantom midge and marsh beetle fossils from New Zealand. These studies show the extent of Otago’s scientific collaborations around the world with co-authors of these papers coming from Germany, France, Spain, Poland and the USA.
END
Insect fossil find ‘extremely rare’
2024-12-02
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New JAMA study shows text messages can be ineffective as medication refill reminders
2024-12-02
A new study published today in JAMA reveals text message reminders for patients who delay refilling their medications didn’t help improve how regularly they refilled medications over a year.
The study enrolled over 9,000 patients in a randomized pragmatic clinical trial and included representation from a diverse population across subgroups, including females, Hispanic ethnicity and Spanish-speaking patients, all groups who can be traditionally underrepresented in clinical trials.
“There are a lot of studies that focus on using technology ...
Migrant pupils need more targeted mental health support in school, study shows
2024-12-02
School-based mental health support should be more accessible for migrant children, a new study says.
Schools are increasingly considered to be critical places for identifying and supporting mental health difficulties, but little is known about the barriers migrants face in accessing mental health support in schools.
Researchers found a lack of targeted school-based mental health interventions designed specifically for young migrants that cater to their unique strengths, resilience and needs.
The review of 38 studies shows that stigma around mental health and stressors associated with migration were among ...
Unveiling a century of stress and deformation: Insights from Kīlauea Volcano’s 1975 earthquake
2024-12-02
Researchers from the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa Department of Earth Sciences assessed an unprecedented 120 years of data from Kīlauea Volcano on Hawai‘i Island, uncovering, for the first time, century-spanning patterns of deformation and stress changes. They had a particular focus on the transformative 1975 magnitude 7.7 Kalapana earthquake, which also resulted in a 20-foot high tsunami. Their study was published recently in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth.
“Deciphering Kīlauea's history deepens our understanding of volcanic and seismic hazards,” said lead author Lauren Ward ...
Pregnancy enhances natural immunity to block severe flu
2024-12-02
McGill University scientists have discovered that pregnancy may trigger a natural immunity to boost protection against severe flu infection.
Contrary to the common belief that pregnancy increases vulnerability to infections, researchers found that it strengthened an immune defense in mice, blocking the Influenza A virus from spreading to the lungs, where it can cause severe infection.
“Our results are surprising because of the current dogma, but it makes sense from an evolutionary perspective,” said co-lead author Dr. Maziar Divangahi, ...
Deep-sea marvels: How anglerfish defy evolutionary expectations
2024-12-02
A groundbreaking Rice University study sheds light on the extraordinary evolution of anglerfish, a group of deep-sea dwellers whose bizarre adaptations have captivated scientists and the public alike. The research, published in Nature Ecology & Evolution, uncovers how these enigmatic creatures defied the odds to diversify in the harsh, resource-poor environment of the bathypelagic zone — part of the open ocean that extends from 3,300 to 13,000 feet below the ocean’s surface.
Led by a team of biologists including Rice’s ...
Using race and ethnicity to estimate disease risk improves prediction accuracy but may yield limited clinical net benefit
2024-12-02
Embargoed for release until 5:00 p.m. ET on Monday 2 December 2024
@Annalsofim
Below please find summaries of new articles that will be published in the next issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. The summaries are not intended to substitute for the full articles as a source of information. This information is under strict embargo and by taking it into possession, media representatives are committing to the terms of the embargo not only on their own behalf, but also on behalf of the organization they represent.
----------------------------
Using ...
Sir Gustav Nossal Professor of Immunology to honor giant of Australian science
2024-12-02
The exceptional research, discovery and advocacy legacy of former WEHI director and Australian treasure Sir Gustav Nossal AC CBE will continue through an ongoing professorship, announced today by WEHI and the Nossal family.
Launched with a generous gift from the Nossal family, the Sir Gustav Nossal Professor of Immunology is a prestigious new position that will lead pivotal research to advance human immunology.
An international search is now underway for an outstanding candidate who will become the first Nossal Professor, a role that will build on Sir Gus’ ...
CMS launches new mandatory kidney transplant payment model
2024-12-02
INDIANAPOLIS -- A new final rule issued by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services this week for a mandatory alternative payment model called the Increasing Organ Transplant Access (IOTA) Model aimed to improve the number of life-saving kidney transplants for patients whose kidneys have failed. The new rule will test whether performance-based upside or downside risk payments among a selected subset of kidney transplant hospitals increase access to kidney transplants for patients with end-stage kidney disease while maintaining or improving the quality of care and reducing Medicare ...
Accelerating climate modeling with generative AI
2024-12-02
The algorithms behind generative AI tools like DallE, when combined with physics-based data, can be used to develop better ways to model the Earth’s climate. Computer scientists in Seattle and San Diego have now used this combination to create a model that is capable of predicting climate patterns over 100 years 25 times faster than the state of the art.
Specifically, the model, called Spherical DYffusion, can project 100 years of climate patterns in 25 hours–a simulation that would take weeks for other models. In addition, existing state-of-the-art models need to run on supercomputers. This model can run on GPU clusters in a research lab.
“Data-driven ...
Study details surprising biological mechanisms underlying severe COVID-19
2024-12-02
Severe COVID-19 arises in part from the SARS-CoV-2 virus’s impact on mitochondria, tiny oxygen-burning power plants in cells, which can help trigger a cascade of organ- and immune system-damaging events, suggests a study by investigators at Weill Cornell Medicine, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, and the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, along with other members of the COVID-19 International Research Team.
Severe COVID-19 has been considered an inflammatory ...