A Carboniferous Mite on an Insect Reveals the Antiquity of an Inconspicuous Interaction

Volume: 26, Issue: 10, Pages: 1376 - 1382
Published: May 1, 2016
Abstract
Symbiosis [1], understood as prolonged interspecific association, is as ancient as the eukaryotic cell [2, 3]. A variety of such associations have been reported in the continental fossil record, albeit sporadically. As for mites, which as a group have been present since the Devonian (ca. 390 mya) [4, 5] and are involved in a tremendous variety of modern-day symbioses, reported associations are limited to a few amber-preserved cases [6-11], with...
Paper Details
Title
A Carboniferous Mite on an Insect Reveals the Antiquity of an Inconspicuous Interaction
Published Date
May 1, 2016
Volume
26
Issue
10
Pages
1376 - 1382
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