Divergent defense strategies and niche partitioning in Cretaceous micro-beetles
Yan‑Da Li , Zhi-Hao Qi , Di‑Ying Huang , Chen‑Yang Cai
Journal of Systematics and Evolution ›› 2026, Vol. 64 ›› Issue (2) : 354 -362.
The evolutionary arms race between insects and their predators has fueled remarkable defensive adaptations, offering insights into ecological dynamics across deep time. Fossils provide critical evidence for studying the evolution of defense strategies. Here, we describe a new lineage of Clambidae from mid-Cretaceous Kachin amber, Scutacalyptus kolibaci gen. et sp. nov. Scutacalyptus stands out within the family due to the flattened body and fully explanate body margins. The diversity of defensive morphotypes in Cretaceous Clambidae, including conglobators like Sphaerothorax, semi-flattened forms like Acalyptomerus, and shield-formers like Scutacalyptus, highlights their developmental plasticity and suggests ecological differentiation in response to varied predation pressures during the late Mesozoic. This morphological divergence reflects niche partitioning in the Cretaceous forest floor ecosystem, driven by a diverse predator array including spiders, ants, lizards, and birds. The coexistence of clambids with spines or explanate margins parallels adaptations in the modern, unrelated Cassidinae, where tortoise beetles use explanate margins and some leaf-mining beetles use spines, each tailored to counter specific predation pressures. These parallel strategies reveal how different defenses likely addressed distinct ecological challenges in the mid-Cretaceous.
beetle / Clambidae / Cretaceous / defense / niche partitioning
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2025 The Author(s). Journal of Systematics and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences.
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