Khimaira fossus

Khimaira fossus
Temporal range: mid-Cretaceous
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Ixodida
Family: Khimairidae
Chitimia-Dobler, Mans and Dunlop, 2022
Genus: Khimaira
Chitimia-Dobler, Mans and Dunlop, 2022
Species:
K. fossus
Binomial name
Khimaira fossus
Chitimia-Dobler et al., 2022

Khimaira is an extinct genus of Cretaceous tick found in Burmese amber from Myanmar, and the only member of the family Khimairidae. The monotypic genus is represented by only one species, Khimaira fossus.[1]

K. fossus is one of a number of paleobiota tick taxa identified in Burmese amber (Cenomanian, ~ 100 Ma), including from other basal Ixodida lineages such as Deinocroton, Legionaris and Nuttalliella. The Ixodida likely originated in Gondwana, with basal lineages such as Khimairidae, Nuttalliellidae and Bothriocrotoninae developing before the formation of the Incertus Arc at 155 Ma. The specimens identified in Burmese amber are the result of the dispersal and occupation of the Burma terrane by these lineages over the arc from Australian land.

The genus Khimaira is named for the chimera, a creature in Greek mythology made up of incongruous animal parts.[2] The species, which is known from a juvenile (nymph) specimen, mirrors this chimerism, combining a soft body similar to those of argasid ticks with mouthparts and a true scutum more similar to those of hard-bodied ixodid ticks.[1] This appearance led researchers to suggest the genus could represent a possible missing link between soft and hard bodied ticks.[3][1]

However, the genus, as preserved, is mid-Cretaceous in age (~ 100 Ma), which neither predates the estimated Ixodidae/Argasidae split (~270 Ma), nor the Prostriata/Metastriata split.[1][4] More importantly, the presence of fossils assignable to contemporary Ixodidae genera in the same amber formation indicate that K. fossus existed contemporaneously with these later lineages. As such, this specimen cannot represent the most recent common ancestor of the two main families.

Rather than being a directly ancestral lineage, the Khimairidae likely represent an early branch (Permian/Triassic) in the lineage that would go on to form modern tick families, with K. fossus being a late surivor of this earlier radiation. Similar instances of basal taxa with conserved plesiomorphic characters are a feature of mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber.[5][6] As such, K. fossus represents the closest image we have of the precursor lineage to the Ixodidae and Argasidae.

Ixodida  
Nuttalliellidae
 
Khimairidae

 

 
Ixodidae (hard ticks)
 Argasidae (soft ticks)
Relationships of living and extinct tick families, after Chitimia-Dobler et al. (2022); Chitimia-Dobler et al. (2024).[7][8]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Chitimia-Dobler, Lidia; Mans, Ben J.; Handschuh, Stephan; Dunlop, Jason A. (May 2022). "A remarkable assemblage of ticks from mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber". Parasitology. pp. 820–830. doi:10.1017/S0031182022000269. Retrieved 27 May 2024.
  2. ^ "The "missing link" of ticks". Museum für Naturkunde. 2022-04-27. Retrieved 2024-06-01.
  3. ^ "Dunlop Lab". Museum für Naturkunde. Retrieved 2024-06-01.
  4. ^ Mans, Ben J.; Featherston, Jonathan; Kvas, Marija; Pillay, Kerry-Anne; de Klerk, Daniel G.; Pienaar, Ronel; de Castro, Minique H.; Schwan, Tom G.; Lopez, Job E.; Teel, Pete; Pérez de León, Adalberto A.; Sonenshine, Daniel E.; Egekwu, Noble I.; Bakkes, Deon K.; Heyne, Heloise (2019-01-01). "Argasid and ixodid systematics: Implications for soft tick evolution and systematics, with a new argasid species list". Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases. 10 (1): 219–240. doi:10.1016/j.ttbdis.2018.09.010. ISSN 1877-959X.
  5. ^ Bai M, Beutel RG, Klass K-D, Zhang W, Yang X and Wipfler B (2016) †Alienoptera – a new insect order in the roach–mantodean twilight zone. Gondwana Research 39, 317–326.
  6. ^ Poinar GO Jr. and Brown AE (2017) An exotic insect Aethiocarenus burmanicus gen. et sp. nov. (Aethiocarenodea ord. nov., Aethiocarenidae fam. nov.) from mid-Cretaceous Myanmar amber. Cretaceous Research 72, 100–104.
  7. ^ Chitimia-Dobler, Lidia; Mans, Ben J.; Handschuh, Stephan; Dunlop, Jason A. (May 2022). "A remarkable assemblage of ticks from mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber". Parasitology. 149 (6): 820–830. doi:10.1017/S0031182022000269. ISSN 0031-1820. PMC 10090602. PMID 35241194.
  8. ^ Chitimia-Dobler, Lidia; Handschuh, Stephan; Dunlop, Jason A.; Pienaar, Ronel; Mans, Ben J. (2024). "Nuttalliellidae in Burmese amber: implications for tick evolution". Parasitology. 151 (9): 891–907. doi:10.1017/S0031182024000477. ISSN 0031-1820. PMC 11770530.