2021
DOI: 10.1186/s12862-021-01930-6
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The earliest beetle with mouthparts specialized for feeding on nectar is a parasitoid of mid-Cretaceous Hymenoptera

Abstract: Background During the Mesozoic, there were many insects in several holometabolous orders (Neuroptera, Mecoptera and Diptera) with elongated mouthparts adapted for feeding on nectar. The evolutionary history of the megadiverse order Coleptera, which has a great diversity of mouthparts and feeding strategies, is well documented since early Permian with a significant peak in diversity in the Triassic. Currently, however, there is no evidence that in the Mesozoic these beetles fed on nectar despite… Show more

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Cited by 398 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…– Elytra in Mordellidae always fully developed, covering the whole abdomen except for the last prolonged abdominal segment (pygidium). – Elytra always shortened and widely dehiscent sub-basally in males of Ripidiini exposing several abdominal segments, but absent in females of the tribe since the mid-Cretaceous period (Batelka et al . 2021).…”
Section: Systematic Partmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…– Elytra in Mordellidae always fully developed, covering the whole abdomen except for the last prolonged abdominal segment (pygidium). – Elytra always shortened and widely dehiscent sub-basally in males of Ripidiini exposing several abdominal segments, but absent in females of the tribe since the mid-Cretaceous period (Batelka et al . 2021).…”
Section: Systematic Partmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast, the second formally established tribe Eorhipidiini with single known extant genus Pterydrias Reitter, 1895 is still completely absent from the fossil record of the subfamily (Batelka et al . 2018, 2021a, Batelka & Prokop 2019, 2021, Batelka et al . 2022, Beutel et al .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The feeding devices of insects represent some of the most well-studied structures among animals [1][2][3]. Insect mouthparts provide compelling examples of structure and function relationships and support important components of natural selection, including convergent evolution [4,5] and coevolution [1,6,7]. Studies of insect mouthparts have become more interdisciplinary, often involving fields that span morphology [8][9][10], biomechanics [11][12][13], developmental biology [14,15], material sciences [16][17][18] and chemistry [19][20][21].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%