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The evolution of arthropods, including insects (EE, pp. 9-21) "Don’t accept the chauvinistic! tradition that labels our era the! age of mammals. This is the age! of arthropods. They outnumber! us by any criterion – by species,! by individuals, by prospects for! evolutionary continuation."! ! Stephen Jay Gould (1988) Geological clock with events and periods First life - single cell prokaryotes - appear 4000 MYA 7.2 Present Cambrian Explosion 542 mya Plankton ! Bacteria ! Bluegreen algae 3,500 mya No life ~ 4.6 billion years ago = Earth formed Animation showing Earth's palaeogeographic reconstruction beginning from early Cambrian period. (540 MYA) http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:TectonicReconstructionGlobal.gif Andrew Parker The Burgess Shale http://commonfossilsofoklahoma.snomnh.ou.edu/cambrian-communities Reconstruction of a Cambrian marine community http://commonfossilsofoklahoma.snomnh.ou.edu/cambrian-communities Cambrian Period In Texas ! Texas laid under a shallow sea during the Cambrian Period. Land lying to the northwest contained sediments comprising mostly sands that were carried into the sea. Other sediments, such as limestones and dolostones were deposited further out to sea. Fossils of sponges, gastropods, trilobites, bivalves and bryozoans are found within those deposits. Lobopods Appeared in the Cambrian ‘explosion’ ! Featured: antennae, annular (ring-like) body segmentations, soft fleshy limbs with claws ! Ancestor of velvet worms (Onycophora) and water-bears (Tardigrada) Insect classification Based on: ! ! •Morphology •Molecular Data Goal: Group species together into their correct evolutionary relationships Dynamic, still changing and improving as we learn more. Homology vs. Homoplasy Homology: When body parts look alike because they are derived from a common ancestor (e.g., bee wings and fly wings). Homoplasy: When body parts look alike because of convergent evolution (e.g., bird wings and bat wings). Sister groups: groups of the same taxonomic rank resulting from the splitting of an ancestral lineage In the top figure, insects and myriapods are sister groups. In the bottom figure, insects and crustaceans are sister groups. Phylogenetic relationships among arthropods are still being debated. Dunn et al. (2008; Nature 452: 745-749) Classification categories broad Kingdom: ! ! ! ! ! ! narrow Phylum: Class: Order: Family: Genus: Species: Classification categories: humans broad Kingdom: Animalia ! ! Phylum: Chordata Class: Mammalia ! Order: Primates ! Family: Homindae ! Genus: Homo ! narrow Species: sapiens Superclass: Tetrapoda Classification categories: fire ants broad Kingdom: Animalia ! ! Phylum: Arthropoda ! ! Class: Insecta Order: Hymenoptera ! ! narrow Family: Formicidae Genus: Solenopsis Species: invicta Superclass: Hexapoda 4) What traits define Arthropods? a) chitinous cuticle b) segmented paired legs c) body segments grouped into tegmata d) all of the above e) none of the above Arthropod key features • Chitinous cuticle (exoskeleton) ! • Segmental paired legs ! • Body segments group into tagmata (usually 2 or 3) Phylum: Arthropoda Subphylum (or superclass) Myriopoda Class: Chilopoda (centipedes) Class: Paurapoda Class: Diplopoda (millipedes) Class: Symphyla Phylum: Arthropoda Subphylum Trilobita (Trilobites, extinct) Subphylum or superclass Chelicerata Class: Metostomata (horseshoe crabs) Class: Arachnida (spiders, scorpions, ticks, mites) Phylum: Arthropoda Subphylum (or s.c.) Pycnogonida (sea spiders) Subphylum or superclass Cructacea Class: Brachiopoda Class: Malacostraca (crabs, shrimp, lobsters) Phylum: Arthropoda Superclass: Hexapoda Class: Insecta Class: Collembola Class: Diplura Class: Protura Evolution of insects Insects evolved on land. ! The earliest known ancestor of insects: (Kalbarriab rimmellae) ! This fossil form was found in 1990 in a 420 million year old sandstone deposit in Australia. ! Although it has more legged segments than an insect, many of its features are very insect-like. Recorded History First humans CARBONIFEROUS Insect ancestor First Terrestrial Arthropods Neopterans (new wings) Carboniferous CARBONIFEROUS Palaeopterans (old wings) Neopterans (new wings) Giant radiation (diversification) CARBONIFEROUS Carboniferous Palaeopterans (old wings) CARBONIFEROUS Complete Metamorphosis Benefits: ! Great way to spend the winter ! Larva and adults eat different food (don’t compete) ! Larva evolve into eating machines ! Adult stage for reproduction Hemimetabola: insect orders with incomplete metamorphosis Adult Example: aphids, grasshoppers fourth instar first instar second instar third instar Holometabola: insect orders with complete metamorphosis Examples: beetles, flies, butterflies, moths Flowering plants (angiosperms) CARBONIFEROUS Flowering plants (angiosperms) CARBONIFEROUS Important evolutionary events • Neopteran wings ! • Holometabolous development (aka complete metamorphosis) ! • Diversification of Flowering Plants