Stunning 3-D images of 300-million-year-old insects have been revealed
for the first time by University of Manchester researchers.
Writing in the journal PLOS ONE, the scientists have used a
high resolution form of CT scanning to reconstruct two
305-million-year-old juvenile insects. Without the pioneering approach
to imaging, these tiny insects -- which are three-dimensional holes in a
rock -- would have been impossible to study.
By placing the fossils in a CT scanner, and taking over 3,000 X-rays
from different angles, the scientists were able to create 2,000 slices
showing the fossil in cross section.
From these slices the researchers created 3D digital reconstructions
of the fossils. This process allows them to learn more about the
lifestyle, biology and diet of the insects, one of which is similar to a
modern day cockroach, and glimpse fascinating insights about how both
were adapted for survival.
One of the insects reconstructed by the scientists is characterised
by a large number of sharp spines. It is a new species and genus which
does not exist today.
The other is an early predecessor of one of the great survivors of
the insect world, the cockroach, and is one of the best preserved
examples of this age ever seen by insect palaeontologists. Researchers
suspect from its well preserved mouthparts that it survived by eating
rotting litter from the forest floor.
Both are members of a group called the Polyneoptera -- which includes
roaches, mantises, crickets, grasshoppers and earwigs. But analysing
the exact relationships of the insects will be difficult for the
researchers, led by Dr Russell Garwood of the University of Manchester's
School of Materials, as insects have a habit of dramatically changing
appearance as they develop.
Dr Garwood said: "The most dramatic change is seen in insects like
butterflies, which change from a larva, to chrysalis, to adult. But
relatively few people look to the fossils try and work out how such a
life cycle may have evolved.
"We are hoping that work like this will allow us to better understand
the biology and development of these early insects, and how major
innovations may have come about.
"Around this time a number of early 'amphibians' were insectivores --
they lived by eating a lot of insects. The spiney creature was a
sitting duck, as it couldn't fly, so the spines probably made it less
palatable. It is bizarre -- as far as we're aware, quite unlike any
members of the Polyneoptera alive today."
"The roach nymph is much like modern day cockroaches -- although it
isn't a 'true' cockroach, as it may well predate the split between true
cockroaches and their sister group, the mantises."
"This is very much a first step, and I'll be spending the next few years looking at other fossil insects to build on this work.
Professor Philip Withers, co-author on the paper, added: "I am very
excited by our fossil work which is providing unique information in 3D."
Source:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/09/120926094537.htm
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