نتایج جستجو برای: fossil record

تعداد نتایج: 121933  

2015
Adiël A. Klompmaker Roger W. Portell Aaron T. Klier Vanessa Prueter Alyssa L. Tucker Kenneth De Baets

Spider crabs (Majoidea) are well-known from modern oceans and are also common in the western part of the Atlantic Ocean. When spider crabs appeared in the Western Atlantic in deep time, and when they became diverse, hinges on their fossil record. By reviewing their fossil record, we show that (1) spider crabs first appeared in the Western Atlantic in the Late Cretaceous, (2) they became common ...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2012
Andrew B Smith Graeme T Lloyd Alistair J McGowan

Sampling bias created by a heterogeneous rock record can seriously distort estimates of marine diversity and makes a direct reading of the fossil record unreliable. Here we compare two independent estimates of Phanerozoic marine diversity that explicitly take account of variation in sampling-a subsampling approach that standardizes for differences in fossil collection intensity, and a rock area...

2015
Bo Wang Fangyuan Xia Torsten Wappler Ewa Simon Haichun Zhang Edmund A Jarzembowski Jacek Szwedo

Behavior of extinct organisms can be inferred only indirectly, but occasionally rare fossils document particular behaviors directly. Brood care, a remarkable behavior promoting the survival of the next generation, has evolved independently numerous times among animals including insects. However, fossil evidence of such a complex behavior is exceptionally scarce. Here, we report an ensign scale ...

2015
Marcel Bläser Lars Krogmann Ralph S. Peters

Cerocephalinae (Chalcidoidea, Pteromalidae) is a small group of parasitoid wasps characterized by a number of derived diagnostic features. Their hosts are endophytic beetles. So far, 43 species of Cerocephalinae have been described, including one fossil species from the Miocene. In this study, we add two new genera and species from Baltic and Dominican amber to the fossil record. Tenuicornus do...

Journal: :Journal of the Royal Society, Interface 2014
Maria E McNamara Vinod Saranathan Emma R Locatelli Heeso Noh Derek E G Briggs Patrick J Orr Hui Cao

Nature's most spectacular colours originate in integumentary tissue architectures that scatter light via nanoscale modulations of the refractive index. The most intricate biophotonic nanostructures are three-dimensional crystals with opal, single diamond or single gyroid lattices. Despite intense interest in their optical and structural properties, the evolution of such nanostructures is poorly...

Journal: :Systematic biology 2015
Jeremy M Beaulieu Brian C O'Meara Peter Crane Michael J Donoghue

Dating analyses based on molecular data imply that crown angiosperms existed in the Triassic, long before their undisputed appearance in the fossil record in the Early Cretaceous. Following a re-analysis of the age of angiosperms using updated sequences and fossil calibrations, we use a series of simulations to explore the possibility that the older age estimates are a consequence of (i) major ...

2017
Chris Mays David J. Cantrill Joseph J. Bevitt

Several highly effective fire-adaptive traits first evolved among modern plants during the mid-Cretaceous, in response to the widespread wildfires promoted by anomalously high atmospheric oxygen (O2) and extreme temperatures. Serotiny, or long-term canopy seed storage, is a fire-adaptive strategy common among plants living in fire-prone areas today, but evidence of this strategy has been lackin...

Journal: :Zootaxa 2015
Lauren G Ashman Rolf G Oberprieler Adam Ślipiński

The first Upper Jurassic fossil of the family Ommatidae (Coleoptera: Archostemata) from Australia is described and illustrated from a single specimen discovered at the Talbragar Fish Bed. Rhopalomma stefaniae gen. et sp. n. is classified in Ommatidae based on the length and insertion of the antennae, the tuberculate cuticle, the pattern of elytral striae, the complete epipleura and the presence...

Journal: :Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciencias 2016
Thais M F Ferreira Adriana Itati Olivares Leonardo Kerber Rodrigo P Dutra Leonardo S Avilla

Echimyidae (spiny rats, tree rats and the coypu) is the most diverse family of extant South American hystricognath rodents (caviomorphs). Today, they live in tropical forests (Amazonian, coastal and Andean forests), occasionally in more open xeric habitats in the Cerrado and Caatinga of northern South America, and open areas across the southern portion of the continent (Myocastor). The Quaterna...

2016
Stephan Herminghaus Katherine Ruth Thomas Saeedeh Aliaskarisohi Hubertus Porada Lucas Goehring

Kinneyia is the commonly used term to describe a class of trace fossil that is strongly associated with microbial mats. The appearance of Kinneyia (or wrinkle structures) in the fossil record has recently led to a number of possible mechanisms being proposed to explain its formation. Here, we outline, and critically compare, three of these models, involving formation of the characteristic rippl...

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