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  • Osmylidae indet.


    Images:

    oilshale

    Taxonomy

    Lance Lacewing

    Kingdom: Animalia
    Phylum: Arthropoda Latreille 1829
    Class: Insecta Linnaeus 1758
    Order: Neuroptera Linnaeus 1758
    Family: Osmylidae Leach 1815
    Genus: Indet.
    Species: Indet.

    Geological Time Scale

    Eon: Phanerozoic
    Era: Mesozoic
    Period: Jurassic
    Sub Period: None
    Epoch: Middle
    International Age: Callovian to Oxfordian

    Stratigraphy

    Jiulongshan Formation
    Daohugou Bed

    Provenance

    Acquired by: Purchase/Trade

    Dimensions

    Length: 32 mm

    Location

    Daohugou (Village)
    Ningcheng (County)
    Inner Mongolia (Province)
    China

    Comments

    There are additional unidentified conchostraca (clam shrimps, arthropods) on the slab.

    The age of the Daohugou strata has been notoriously difficult to determine, and a number of studies have produced conflicting results. Gao and Shubin, 2001 reported an Argon-argon dating age of 164 ±4 million years ago (Middle to Late Jurassic, Bathonian to Oxfordian); this opinion is now widely accepted.

    Taxonomy according to Fossilworks.org.

    Diagnosis for the family OSMYLIDAE Leach, 1815 according to Winterton et al., 2019 p. 13. “Adult head with dorsal tentorial arms weakly developed; ocelli usually present, medial ocellus sometimes reduced (e.g., Paryphosmylus) or all ocelli completely absent (e.g., Gumillinae); palpimaculae absent; antennae filiform; wings with basal subcostal veinlet simple in costal area, sometimes forked but never recurrent; single basal crossvein (sc-r) between Sc and R, rarely more than one (e.g., Porismus, Archaeosmylidia); Sc and RA fused apically and joining costal margin before wing apex in both wings; single branch of RP, subsequently pectinately branched (5 or more branches); FW radial branches frequently curved posteriorly in apical half of wing, sometimes sinuous; FW medial vein fork variably placed along wing, HW medial vein fork near wing base; FW CuP pectinately (rarely dichotomously) branched; cubital field relatively large in both wings; nygmata typically present; trichosors present in both wings (rarely reduced to apical margin); end twigging along wing margin present, sometimes extensive and multi-layered; jugal lobe present; female gonocoxite 9 (gx 9) (i.e., gonopophysis lateralis) elongate and with terminal stylus; female with a pair of sclerotised spermathecae; male genitalia with well-developed arched gonarcus with paired entoprocesses fused laterally; mediuncus curved; parameres present or absent, sometimes fused into single arched sclerite; larva (Fig. 1) with straight, highly elongate jaws; gular-like sclerite absent; seven Malphigian tubules, of which five arge incorporated into the cryptonephridium; eversible claws present on paired prolegs on last abdominal segment.”

    Identified by Alex Khramov (Borissiak Paleontological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia): “Osmylidae, but definitely not Ponomarenkius or any other Kempyninae. Which genus or subfamily I cannot tell you - too fragmentary preservation and, moreover, there are many undescribed osmylids in Daohugou, so probably your specimen is one of them.” 

    References:

    Gao K Q, Shubin N. (2001): Late Jurassic salamanders from Northern China. Nature, 410: 574–577.

    Winterton, Shaun L., Martins, Caleb C., Makarkin, V., Camacho, Adrian A., & Wang, Yongjie (2019): Lance lacewings of the world (Neuroptera: Archeosmylidae, Osmylidae, Saucrosmylidae): review of living and fossil genera. Zootaxa 4581 (1): 001–099. https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4581.1.1 .




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