Benjamin Carbuccia, Hannah M. Wood, C. Rollard, A. Nel, R. Garrouste
{"title":"A new Myrmecarchaea (Araneae: Archaeidae) species from Oise amber (earliest Eocene, France)","authors":"Benjamin Carbuccia, Hannah M. Wood, C. Rollard, A. Nel, R. Garrouste","doi":"10.1051/bsgf/2020023","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Extant Archaeidae, also known as pelican or assassin spiders, have an Austral distribution (South Africa, Madagascar and Australia), but were present in Eurasia during the Mesozoic and Cenozoic, as attested by fossils from Cretaceous Burmese amber (Ross A. 2019. Burmese (Myanmar) amber checklist and bibliography 2018. Palaeoentomology 2(1): 22–84) and Eocene European ambers (Wunderlich J. 2004. Fossil spiders in amber and copal: conclusions, revisions, new taxa and family diagnoses of fossil and extant taxa. Hirschberg-Leutershausen: Ed. Joerg Wunderlich, 1893 p.). They have been known to occur in Oise amber (Ypresian, early Eocene, MP7), from northern France. However, they are not abundant in Oise amber, and have been the subject of few studies until now. Here, we describe the only well-preserved, almost complete, archaeid fossil specimen. This adult male is described as Myrmecarchaea antecessor sp. nov, based on the presence of unique morphological features. The elongate petiolus and extremely long legs are characteristic of the genus Myrmecarchaea from the Middle Eocene Baltic amber. However, unique traits such as the thick, stout petiolus and the extremely elongated, posteriorly tapering cephalothorax distinguish it from the other species of Myrmecarchaea. This specimen is of high interest, as besides being a new species, it is also the first documented adult male in the genus, allowing us to observe sexual characters for the first time. Furthermore, it is the first occurrence of this genus outside Baltic amber, showing affinities between Oise and Baltic ambers, which are, otherwise, very different in their faunistic compositions, and further extends the known past range of the archaeid spiders.","PeriodicalId":202681,"journal":{"name":"BSGF - Earth Sciences Bulletin","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"BSGF - Earth Sciences Bulletin","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1051/bsgf/2020023","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 3
Abstract
Extant Archaeidae, also known as pelican or assassin spiders, have an Austral distribution (South Africa, Madagascar and Australia), but were present in Eurasia during the Mesozoic and Cenozoic, as attested by fossils from Cretaceous Burmese amber (Ross A. 2019. Burmese (Myanmar) amber checklist and bibliography 2018. Palaeoentomology 2(1): 22–84) and Eocene European ambers (Wunderlich J. 2004. Fossil spiders in amber and copal: conclusions, revisions, new taxa and family diagnoses of fossil and extant taxa. Hirschberg-Leutershausen: Ed. Joerg Wunderlich, 1893 p.). They have been known to occur in Oise amber (Ypresian, early Eocene, MP7), from northern France. However, they are not abundant in Oise amber, and have been the subject of few studies until now. Here, we describe the only well-preserved, almost complete, archaeid fossil specimen. This adult male is described as Myrmecarchaea antecessor sp. nov, based on the presence of unique morphological features. The elongate petiolus and extremely long legs are characteristic of the genus Myrmecarchaea from the Middle Eocene Baltic amber. However, unique traits such as the thick, stout petiolus and the extremely elongated, posteriorly tapering cephalothorax distinguish it from the other species of Myrmecarchaea. This specimen is of high interest, as besides being a new species, it is also the first documented adult male in the genus, allowing us to observe sexual characters for the first time. Furthermore, it is the first occurrence of this genus outside Baltic amber, showing affinities between Oise and Baltic ambers, which are, otherwise, very different in their faunistic compositions, and further extends the known past range of the archaeid spiders.
现存的古蛛科,也被称为鹈鹕蜘蛛或刺客蜘蛛,分布在南方(南非、马达加斯加和澳大利亚),但在中生代和新生代就出现在欧亚大陆,白垩纪缅甸琥珀的化石证明了这一点(Ross A. 2019)。2018年缅甸琥珀清单及参考书目。古昆虫学2(1):22-84)和始新世欧洲琥珀(Wunderlich J. 2004。琥珀和copal中的蜘蛛化石:化石和现存分类群的结论、修订、新分类群和科诊断。Hirschberg-Leutershausen: Ed. Joerg Wunderlich, 1893页)。已知它们出现在法国北部的Oise琥珀(伊波斯,早始新世,MP7)中。然而,它们在瓦兹琥珀中含量并不丰富,迄今为止一直是研究的对象。在这里,我们描述了唯一保存完好,几乎完整的古细菌化石标本。根据其独特的形态特征,这只成年雄性被描述为Myrmecarchaea祖先sp. nov。细长的叶柄和极长的腿是始新世中期波罗的海琥珀中Myrmecarchaea属的特征。然而,其独特的特征,如厚实、粗壮的叶柄和极其细长、向后逐渐变细的头胸,使其与其他种类的蜜古菌区分开来。这个标本非常有趣,因为除了是一个新种之外,它也是该属中第一个有记录的成年雄性,使我们第一次观察到性别特征。此外,这是该属在波罗的海琥珀之外的第一次出现,显示了Oise和波罗的海琥珀之间的亲缘关系,除此之外,它们的动物组成非常不同,并进一步扩展了已知的古蜘蛛过去的范围。