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Data from: Evolution of flexible biting in hyperdiverse parasitoid wasps

Van De Kamp, Thomas ORCID iD icon 1; Mikó, István; Staniczek, Arnold H.; Eggs, Benjamin; Bajerlein, Daria; Faragó, Tomáš 1; Hagelstein, Lea; Hamann, Elias ORCID iD icon 1; Spiecker, Rebecca ORCID iD icon 1,2; Baumbach, Tilo 1,2; Janšta, Petr; Krogmann, Lars
1 Institut für Photonenforschung und Synchrotronstrahlung (IPS), Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT)
2 Laboratorium für Applikationen der Synchrotronstrahlung (LAS), Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT)

Abstract:

One key event in insect evolution was the development of mandibles with two joints, which allowed powerful biting, but restricted their movement to a single degree of freedom. These mandibles define the Dicondylia, which constitute over 99 percent of all extant insect species. It was common doctrine that the dicondylic articulation of chewing mandibles remained unaltered for more than 400 million years. We report highly modified mandibles overcoming the restrictions of a single degree of freedom and hypothesize their major role in insect diversification. These mandibles are defining features of parasitoid chalcid wasps, one of the most species-rich lineages of insects. The shift from powerful chewing to precise cutting likely facilitated adaptations to parasitize hosts hidden in hard substrates, which pose challenges to the emerging wasps. We reveal a crucial step in insect evolution and highlight the importance of comprehensive studies even of putatively well-known systems.


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Originalveröffentlichung
DOI: 10.5061/dryad.0rxwdbs1x
Zugehörige Institution(en) am KIT Institut für Photonenforschung und Synchrotronstrahlung (IPS)
Laboratorium für Applikationen der Synchrotronstrahlung (LAS)
Publikationstyp Forschungsdaten
Publikationsdatum 01.12.2021
Identifikator KITopen-ID: 1000155764
HGF-Programm 56.12.11 (POF IV, LK 01) Materials - Quantum, Complex and Functional
Lizenz cc0-1.0
Schlagwörter Mandibles, Functional morphology, insect diversification, FOS: Biological sciences
Art der Forschungsdaten Dataset
KIT – Die Forschungsuniversität in der Helmholtz-Gemeinschaft
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