4.3 Article

Evidence for wing development in the Late Palaeozoic Palaeodictyoptera revisited

Journal

ARTHROPOD STRUCTURE & DEVELOPMENT
Volume 63, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.asd.2021.101061

Keywords

Insecta; Palaeoptera; Palaeodictyopterida; Ephemeroptera; Postembryonic development; Wing tracheae and lacunae

Categories

Funding

  1. Charles University Grant Agency (GAUK) [1612218]
  2. Grant Agency of the Czech Republic [1803118S]

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The study challenges the original idea of articulated and movable wings in Palaeozoic insect larvae, suggesting that the supposed wings are actually wing pads with developing wings inside. Additionally, the research confirms the presence of nygma-like structures on the wings and wing pads of Palaeodictyopteran Tchirkovaeidae.
The numerous fossil specimens described as consecutive series of different larval stages of two species, Tchirkovaea guttata and Paimbia fenestrata (Palaeodictyoptera: Tchirkovaeidae), were reinvestigated with emphasis on comparing the development and growth of their wings with that of the wings of a recent mayfly, Cloeon dipterum. This unique fossil material was for a long time considered as undisputed evidence for an unusual type of wing development in Palaeozoic insects. The original idea was that the larvae of Palaeodictyopterida had wings, which were articulated and fully movable in their early stages of postembryonic development and that these gradually enlarging wings changed their position from longitudinal to perpendicular to the body axis. Moreover, the development of wings was supposed to include two or more subimaginal instars, implying that the fully winged instars moulted several times during their postembryonic development. The results of the present study revealed that there is no evidence that this series of nymphal, subimaginal and imaginal wings provide support for the original idea of wing development in Palaeozoic insects. On the contrary, our results indicate, that the supposed palaeodictyopteran larval wings are in fact wing pads with a wing developing inside the cuticular sheath as in recent hemimetabolous insects. Moreover, this study newly reinterpreted the wing pad base of Parathesoneura carpenteri and confirmed the presence of nygma like structures on wings and wing pads of palaeodictyopteran Tchirkovaeidae. (c) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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