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Flower-Associated Brachycera Flies as Fossil Evidence for Jurassic Angiosperm Origins
168
Citations
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References
1998
Year
BiologyMorphological EvidencePhylogeneticsNatural SciencesFloral TypesEvolutionary BiologyEntomologyFlower-associated Brachycera FliesCretaceous PeriodShort-horned FliesPaleobotanyEarly Evolution
Pollinating insects played a decisive role in the origin and early evolution of the angiosperms. Pollinating orthorrhaphous Brachycera fossils (short-horned flies) collected from Late Jurassic rocks in Liaoning Province of northeast China provide evidence for a pre-Cretaceous origin of angiosperms. Functional morphology and comparison with modern confamilial taxa show that the orthorrhaphous Brachycera were some of the most ancient pollinators. These data thus imply that angiosperms originated during the Late Jurassic and were represented by at least two floral types.
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