Subfamily Anischiinae (Coleoptera: Eucnemidae) in Early Cretaceous of Northeast China

Insects. 2021 Jan 26;12(2):105. doi: 10.3390/insects12020105.

Abstract

Rheanischia new genus, type species Rheanischia brevicornis new species (Eucnemidae, Anischiinae) is described from the Lower Cretaceous of Liaoning, China. The presence of this species in early Cretaceous deposits provides new insight into the evolution of basal lignicolous Eucnemidae clades. Both Anischiinae and Palaeoxeninae species diversified in a world dominated by gymnosperms, before the main radiation of angiosperms. More than 95% of modern eucnemid larvae have a Palaeoxenus-type highly modified head structure, but contrary to the Palaeoxenus larva, they develop in angiosperm wood. Anischiinae utilize angiosperms as well, but their head capsule shows no such modifications. These facts prove that highly specialized morphological features do not offer definite proof of similar way of life in the distant past, nor should non-modified structures be taken as proof for another kind of substrate choice. Eucnemidae have invaded angiosperms with two quite different morphological adaptations. This fact may have implications for the evolution of all clicking elateroids.

Keywords: Anischiinae; China; Coleoptera; Cretaceous; Eucnemidae; Jehol Biota; Yixian Formation; angiosperms; evolutionary specialization; fossils; gymnosperms; new taxa.