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Snow scorpionfly

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Family of insects

Snow scorpionfly
Boreus hyemalis
Scientific classificationEdit this classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Arthropoda
Class:Insecta
Order:Mecoptera
Family:Boreidae
Genera

Boreidae, commonly calledsnow scorpionflies, or in theBritish Isles,snow fleas (no relation to the snow fleaHypogastrura nivicola) are a very small family ofscorpionflies, containing only around 30 species, all of which areboreal or high-altitude species in theNorthern Hemisphere.

Theseinsects are small (typically 6 mm or less), with the wings reduced to bristles or absent, and they are somewhat compressed, so in fact some resemblance to fleas is noted. They are most commonly active during the winter months, towards the transition into spring, and the larvae and adults typically feed on mosses. The adults will often disperse between breeding areas by walking across the open snow, thus the common name. The wings of females are small and vestigial oval pads with no ability to allow them to fly, but the male use his bristle-like wings to help grasp the female from below while she is positioned over him during mating.[1] The adults have a longrostrum formed from theclypeus andlabrum,genae, andmaxillo-labium.

The body temperature, and therefore activity level, of this scorpionfly depends on its absorption of short-wave and long-wave radiation rather than surrounding air temperatures (by which it is completely unaffected). The boundary layer of snow that the insect occupies has very low thermal conductance, and so the insect loses its own heat very slowly here. This delicate balance between cold and heat means that the animal is easily killed by heat when held in a human hand.[2]

Both their middle and hindlegs can be used for jumping. Males transfer their sperm as a spermatophore, which differs from most males in the order, where liquid ejaculation is the general rule. The genus Caurinus differ from Boreus and Hesperoboreus in having larvae with thoracic legs consisting of a single segment, while the larvae of the two latter has three-segmented thoracic legs.[3]

The group has been proposed in some studies to be the closest relatives offleas (Siphonaptera), rendering Mecoptera paraphyletic. This has been disputed by other studies, which findNannochoristidae more closely related to fleas instead.[4]

Phylogeny

[edit]

It is unclear as of 2020 whether the Mecoptera form a single clade, or whether theSiphonaptera (fleas) are inside that clade, so that the traditional "Mecoptera" is paraphyletic. However the earlier suggestion that the Siphonaptera are sister to the Boreidae[5][6][7] is not supported. The two possible trees are shown below:[8]

(a) Mecoptera is paraphyletic, Boreidae is sister to (Nannochoristidae +Siphonaptera):[8]

Antliophora

Diptera (true flies)

Pistillifera (scorpionflies, hangingflies, 400spp.)

Nannochoristidae (southern scorpionflies, 8 spp.)

Siphonaptera (fleas, 2500 spp.)

Boreidae (snow scorpionflies, 30 spp.)

(b) Mecoptera is monophyletic, Boreidae is sister toPistillifera:[8]

Antliophora
Mecoptera

Pistillifera (scorpionflies, hangingflies, 400spp.)

Boreidae (snow scorpionflies, 30 spp.)

Nannochoristidae (southern scorpionflies, 8 spp.)

Siphonaptera

(fleas, 2500 spp.)

Genera

[edit]

This list is adapted from theWorld Checklist of extant Mecoptera species,[9] and is complete as of 1997. The number of species in each genus is indicated in parentheses.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Biology of the Mecoptera - Page 217
  2. ^Daniel Marlos (2010-10-05).The Curious World of Bugs: The Bugman's Guide to the Mysterious and Remarkable Lives of Things That Crawl. Penguin Publishing Group. p. 218.ISBN 978-1-101-44406-1.
  3. ^First discovery of snow scorpionflies (Mecoptera: Boreidae) from China
  4. ^Tihelka, Erik; Giacomelli, Mattia; Huang, Di-Ying; Pisani, Davide; Donoghue, Philip C. J.; Cai, Chen-Yang (2020-12-21)."Fleas are parasitic scorpionflies".Palaeoentomology.3 (6): 641–653–641–653.doi:10.11646/palaeoentomology.3.6.16.hdl:1983/8d3c12c6-529c-4754-b59d-3abf88a32fc9.ISSN 2624-2834.S2CID 234423213.
  5. ^Whiting, Michael F.; Whiting, Alison S.; Hastriter, Michael W.; Dittmar, Katharina (2008). "A molecular phylogeny of fleas (Insecta: Siphonaptera): origins and host associations".Cladistics.24 (5):677–707.CiteSeerX 10.1.1.731.5211.doi:10.1111/j.1096-0031.2008.00211.x.S2CID 33808144.
  6. ^Whiting, Michael F. (2002)."Mecoptera is paraphyletic: multiple genes and phylogeny of Mecoptera and Siphonaptera".Zoologica Scripta.31 (1):93–104.doi:10.1046/j.0300-3256.2001.00095.x.S2CID 56100681. Archived fromthe original on 2013-01-05.
  7. ^Wiegmann, Brian; Yeates, David K. (2012).The Evolutionary Biology of Flies. Columbia University Press. p. 5.ISBN 978-0-231-50170-5.Recently, a close affinity between Siphonaptera and Mecoptera has been convincingly demonstrated via morphology (Bilinski et al. 1998) and molecular data (Whiting 2002), rendering Mecoptera paraphyletic, but making the clade including Mecoptera and Siphonaptera monophyletic
  8. ^abcMeusemann, Karen; Trautwein, Michelle; Friedrich, Frank; Beutel, Rolf G.; Wiegmann, Brian M.; et al. (2020). "Are Fleas Highly Modified Mecoptera? Phylogenomic Resolution of Antliophora (Insecta: Holometabola)".bioRxiv 10.1101/2020.11.19.390666.
  9. ^BoreidaeArchived 2004-01-11 atarchive.today
  10. ^Sikes, Derek; Jill Stockbridge (July 11, 2013)."Description of Caurinus tlagu, new species, from Prince of Wales Island, Alaska (Mecoptera, Boreidae, Caurininae)".ZooKeys (316):35–53.doi:10.3897/zookeys.316.5400.PMC 3713333.PMID 23878513.
ExtantMecoptera andSiphonaptera families
Clade 1
Clade 2
S
i
p
h
o
n
a
p
t
e
r
a


(fleas)
Pulicomorpha
Pulicoidea
Ancistropsylloidea
Coptopsylloidea
Malacopsylloidea
Vermipsylloidea
Ceratophyllomorpha
Ceratophylloidea
Hystrichopsyllomorpha
Stephanocircidoidea
Hystrichopsylloidea
Macropsylloidea
Pygiopsyllomorpha
Pygiopsylloidea
Classification is based onWhiting, M. F. (2002)
Boreidae
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