A Dendroctonus Bark Engraving (Coleoptera: Scolytidae) From A Middle Eocene Larix (Coniferales: Pinaceae): Early Or Delayed Colonization?

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Related Collections

Degree type

Discipline

Subject

Canadian Arctic
coevolution
Dendroctonus
Eocene
Larix
Napartulik
Pinaceae
plant–insect associations
Scolytidae
Tomicini

Funder

Grant number

License

Copyright date

Distributor

Related resources

Author

Labandeira, Conrad C
LePage, Ben A

Contributor

Abstract

An engraving made by a scolytid bark beetle, assigned to the genus Dendroctonus of the tribe Tomicini, has been identified on a mummified, middle Eocene (45 Ma) specimen of Larix altoborealis wood from the Canadian High Arctic. Larix altoborealis is the earliest known species of Larix, a distinctive lineage of pinaceous conifers that is taxonomically identifiable by the middle Eocene and achieved a broad continental distribution in northern North America and Eurasia during the late Cenozoic. Dendroctonus currently consists of three highly host-specific lineages that have pinaceous hosts: a basal monospecific clade on Pinoideae (Pinus) and two sister clades that consist of a speciose clade associated exclusively with Pinoideae and six species that breed overwhelmingly in Piceoideae (Picea) and Laricoideae (Pseudotsuga and Larix). The middle Eocene engraving in L. altoborealis represents an early member of Dendroctonus that is ancestral to other congeneric species that colonized a short-bracted species of Larix. This fossil occurrence, buttressed by recent data on the phylogeny of Pinaceae subfamilies and Dendroctonus species, indicates that there was phylogenetically congruent colonization by these bark-beetle lineages of a Pinoideae + (Piceoideae + Laricoideae) host-plant sequence. Based on all available evidence, an hypothesis of a geochronologically early invasion during the Early Cretaceous is supported over an alternative view of late Cenozoic cladogenesis by bark beetles onto the Pinaceae. These data also suggest that host-plant chemistry may be an effective species barrier to colonization by some bark-beetle taxa over geologically long time scales.

Advisor

Date Range for Data Collection (Start Date)

Date Range for Data Collection (End Date)

Digital Object Identifier

Series name and number

Publication date

2001-11-01

Journal title

American Journal of Botany

Volume number

Issue number

Publisher

Publisher DOI

relationships.isJournalIssueOf

Comments

Reprinted from American Journal of Botany, Volume 88, Number 11, November 2001, pages 2026-2039.

Recommended citation

Collection