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Fossil data lacking for insects and fungi
Science, 2017In their Review “Merging paleobiology with conservation biology to guide the future of terrestrial ecosystems” (10 February, p. [594][1]), A. D. Barnosky et al. describe the value of using paleobiological information for conservation management.
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Preservation of Fossil Insects and Plants on Mazon Creek [PDF]
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J W Pike
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Insect Diversity in the Fossil Record
Science, 1993Insects possess a surprisingly extensive fossil record. Compilation of the geochronologic ranges of insect families demonstrates that their diversity exceeds that of preserved vertebrate tetrapods through 91 percent of their evolutionary history. The great diversity of insects was achieved not by high origination rates but rather by low extinction ...
Labandeira, Conrad C., Sepkoski, J. J.
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Fossil evidence of insect pathogens
Journal of Invertebrate Pathology, 2005The present report describes fossil evidence of insect pathogens, heretofore, almost non-existent, from six samples of amber ranging in age from 15 to 100 million years. They include a cytoplasmic polyhedrosis virus and trypanosomatid infection in an adult biting midge (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae), and a nuclear polyhedrosis virus in an adult sand fly ...
George, Poinar, Roberta, Poinar
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Fossil Cockroaches or Pinnule Insects?
Proceedings of the Geologists Association, 1994Willi Hennig's case for rejecting fossil insects with external ovipositors from the order Blattodea (Cockroaches) is discussed, as well as the leaf-mimicry hypothesis involving Cockroaches and ferns which was first suggested by Samuel Scudder nearly 100 years ago.
Edmund A Jarzembowski
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The Khasurty Fossil Insect Lagerstätte
Paleontological Journal, 2020The Khasurty locality (Lower Cretaceous of Transbaikalia, Russia) is one of the largest fossil insect sites in the region. Over the entire period of study, more than 6000 insect imprints have been collected here, representing 16 orders and 130 families.
Kopylov, D. S. +27 more
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