Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T12:26:49.822Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A remarkable assemblage of ticks from mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 March 2022

Lidia Chitimia-Dobler
Affiliation:
Bundeswehr Institute of Microbiology, Neuherbergstrasse 11, D-80937Munich, Germany
Ben J. Mans*
Affiliation:
Epidemiology, Parasites and Vectors, Agricultural Research Council-Onderstepoort Veterinary Research, Onderstepoort, South Africa The Department of Veterinary Tropical Diseases, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa Department of Life and Consumer Sciences, University of South Africa, Pretoria, South Africa
Stephan Handschuh
Affiliation:
VetCore Facility for Research, Veterinärmedizinische Universität Wien, Veterinärplatz 1, A-1210Vienna, Austria
Jason A. Dunlop
Affiliation:
Museum für Naturkunde, Leibniz Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity Science, Invalidenstrasse 43, D-10115Berlin, Germany
*
Author for correspondence: Ben J. Mans, E-mail: mansb@arc.agric.za

Abstract

Four fossil ticks (Arachnida: Parasitiformes: Ixodida) are described from mid-Cretaceous (ca. 100 Ma) Burmese amber of Myanmar. Ixodes antiquorum sp. nov. (Ixodidae) is the first Mesozoic record of Ixodes and the oldest representative of the most species-rich extant tick genus. Its affinities appear to lie with modern Australian forms, consistent with the hypothesis that Burmese amber hosted Gondwanan faunal elements. Even more remarkable is Khimaira fossus gen. et sp. nov. which combines a body resembling that of a soft tick (Argasidae) with a basis capitulum more like that of a hard tick (Ixodidae). We refer it to Khimairidae fam. nov. as a possible transitional form between the two main families of ticks alive today. Another member of the extinct Deinocrotonidae is described as Deinocroton copia sp. nov., while the first described adult female for Cornupalpatum burmanicum is associated with a dinosaur feather barb.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press

Introduction

Ticks (Parasitiformes: Ixodida) are distinctive arachnids, all of which are haematophagous ectoparasites of vertebrates. As important vectors of several diseases in humans and livestock, they have attracted a considerable body of research (Sonenshine and Roe, Reference Sonenshine and Roe2013). Approximately 905 living species are conventionally divided into ~714 hard ticks (Ixodidae), ~190 soft ticks (Argasidae), plus a further family (Nuttalliellidae) with a single species (Beati and Klompen, Reference Beati and Klompen2019). Fossil ticks are rare but have occasionally been recorded as subfossils assignable to living species (Sanchez et al., Reference Sanchez, Nava, Lareschi, Ortiz and Guglielmone2010). Most tick fossils are inclusions in amber. Both hard and soft ticks are known from Miocene Dominican Republic amber (Lane and Poinar, Reference Lane and Poinar1986; Poinar, Reference Poinar1995), dated 20–15 Ma (Peris et al., Reference Peris, Solórzano Kraemer, Peñalver and Delclòs2015). There is a hard tick from Eocene (ca. 49–44 Ma) Baltic amber and a soft tick from Late Cretaceous (ca. 94–90 Ma) New Jersey amber (Weidner, Reference Weidner1964; Klompen and Grimaldi, Reference Klompen and Grimaldi2001). The oldest, and most productive, source of fossil ticks is the mid-Cretaceous (ca. 100 Ma) Burmese amber of Myanmar. This deposit hosts a surprisingly diverse fauna including two extinct genera of hard ticks, Cornupalpatum (Poinar and Brown, Reference Poinar and Brown2003) and Compluriscutula (Poinar and Buckley, Reference Poinar and Buckley2008), alongside fossils assigned to two living hard tick genera, Amblyomma Koch, 1844 and Haemaphysalis Koch, 1844 (Klompen in Grimaldi et al., Reference Grimaldi, Engel and Nascimbene2002; Chitimia-Dobler et al., Reference Chitimia-Dobler, Cancian de Araujo, Ruthensteiner, Pfeffer and Dunlop2017, Reference Chitimia-Dobler, Pfeffer and Dunlop2018). There is also an extinct family and genus: Deinocrotonidae and Deinocroton Peñalver, Arillo, Anderson and Pérez-de la Fuente, 2017 (Peñalver et al., Reference Peñalver, Arillo, Delclòs, Peris, Grimaldi, Anderson, Nascimbene and Pérez-de la Fuente2017).

Hard ticks are further subdivided into two clades: Prostriata, containing the genus Ixodes Latreille, 1795 (Latreille, Reference Latreille1795), and Metastriata encompassing the remaining Ixodidae genera. Prostriates and metastriates can be distinguished on characters such as the position of the groove around the anus and the absence or presence of festoons around the posterior edge of the body. All hard ticks found in Burmese amber so far have been metastriates, while the oldest prostriate is an Ixodes species from Baltic amber (Weidner, Reference Weidner1964; Dunlop et al., Reference Dunlop, Apanaskevich, Lehmann, Hoffmann, Fusseis, Ehlke, Zachow and Xiao2016). Here, we describe the first Ixodes tick from Burmese amber doubling the stratigraphic range of Prostriata. The second inclusion represents the first adult female of Cornupalpatum in Burmese amber and, like a previous record (Peñalver et al., Reference Peñalver, Arillo, Delclòs, Peris, Grimaldi, Anderson, Nascimbene and Pérez-de la Fuente2017), is associated with a dinosaur feather which has implications for its feeding ecology. A third inclusion represents a new species belonging to the previously described extinct genus Deinocroton. The final and most surprising inclusion is even more interesting having a body resembling that of a soft tick, but a capitulum (the region bearing the mouthparts) like that of a hard tick. This latter inclusion represents an extinct lineage, potentially ancestral to the two main tick families today. However, molecular data suggest that the split between Ixodidae and Argasidae was considerably older than the mid-Cretaceous (Mans et al., Reference Mans, de Klerk, Pienaar, de Castro and Latif2012, Reference Mans, Featherston, Kvas, Pillay, de Klerk, Pienaar, de Castro, Schwan, Lopez, Teel, Pérez de León, Sonenshine, Egekwu, Bakkes, Heyne, Kanduma, Nyangiwe, Bouattour and Latif2019), which could imply that the new fossil is a late survivor of an earlier radiation.

Materials and methods

Material

Three fossils originate from the private collection of Patrick Müller and bear the specimen numbers BUB4185 (Ixodes antiquorum sp. nov.), BUB4029 (Khimaira fossus sp. nov.), BUB3319 (Deinocroton copia sp. nov.). One is from the collection of Lidia Chitimia-Dobler (the Cornupalpatum female). Specimens from Patrick Müller have been deposited in the Paleontological collection in Munich (BUB4185: SNSB-BSPG 2021 XII 10; BUB4029: SNSB-BSPG 2021 XII 11; BUB3319: SNSB-BSPG 2021 XII 12) and from Lidia Chitimia-Dobler in the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin.

Imaging

For photography, a Keyence VHX-7000 Digital Microscope with an FI 4K Revolver Head (Keyence Itasca, IL, USA), an X-Y and Z-motorized stage, and a tiltable stand, with a combination of incident and transmitted light for focus stacking and a Keyence VHX-900F (Keyence Itasca), were used. Magnifications ranged from 100 to 1000 times. Polarized light was used for some images to resolve more details, and the resulting image stacks were combined using the software Helicon Focus 6.7.1. Microscopic computed tomography (microCT) scans were acquired using a Zeiss XRadia MicroXCT-400 (Carl Zeiss X-ray Microscopy, Pleasanton, CA, USA). Acquisition settings were adapted depending on the size of the specimen, size of the amber piece and required level of detail. For the D. copia sp. nov. specimen, the whole body was scanned at 80 kVp per 100 μA with 30 s exposure using the 0.4× detector assembly resulting in 4.64 μm isotropic voxel size. For the K. fossus sp. nov. specimen, the whole body was scanned at 80 kVp per 100 μA with 30 s exposure using the 4× detector assembly resulting in 1.95 μm isotropic voxel size. For the I. antiquorum sp. nov. specimen, capitulum and scutum were scanned at 80 kVp per 50 μA with 60 s exposure using the 20× detector assembly resulting in 0.44 μm isotropic voxel size. For the Cornupalpatum female, the whole body was scanned at 40 kVp per 200 μA with 30 s exposure using the 4× detector assembly resulting in 1.37 μm isotropic voxel size. All scans were recorded over a 360° specimen rotation with an angular increment of 0.225° between projections. Image volumes were processed and visualized by volume rendering using the 3D software package Amira 6.4. Drawings were prepared with a camera lucida attachment on a Leica M205C stereomicroscope (Leica Microsystems, Wetzlar, Germany), again using a combination of incident and transmitted light where appropriate.

Results

A new prostriate fossil

Class Arachnida Lamarck, Reference Lamarck1801

Order Parasitiformes Reuter, Reference Reuter1909

Suborder Ixodida Leach, Reference Leach1815

Family Ixodidae Murray, Reference Murray1877

Ixodes Latreille, Reference Latreille1795

Ixodes antiquorum Chitimia-Dobler, Mans and Dunlop sp. nov.

Etymology. From the Latin antiquus (aged, ancient).

Holotype. Female tick (BUB4185) (Fig. 1) deposited in the Munich Paleontological Collection. The species name was registered with Zoobank (LSID code: zoobank.org:act:739BD930-5C1C-4E6E-8C4A-A05180B216A8).

Fig. 1. Ixodes antiquorum sp. nov. (Ixodidae) from Burmese amber designated as the holotype for this species. Indicated are dorsal (left) and ventral (right) images. The absence of festoons and the anterior anal groove can be clearly discerned. Arrows indicate the presence of notch-like processes on the joints. Line drawings at the bottom indicate important aspects described in the text. Scale bars indicated are 0.1 mm for the photos and 1 mm for line drawings.

Diagnosis. Ixodes nymphal tick in which the anal groove encircles the anus anteriorly, eyes absent, festoons absent, coxae without spurs. Scutum wider than long, carinae absent on basis capituli and scutum; trochanter, femur and genu articulations with notch-like processes.

Description of nymph

Idiosoma: body ovoid, length from middle of scutum to posterior body margin: 0.793 mm; maximum width (measured in middle, behind third legs) 0.565 mm; dorsal and ventral surface without setae, but with a moderate number of large punctuations (Fig. 1). Scutum 0.471 mm wide (measured in middle) and 0.342 mm long (from middle to edge); broadest prior to the posterior end, large sparse punctuations distributed throughout scutum, sides straight and diverging posteriorly, posterior margin slightly convex, posterior corrugations absent; scapulae blunt (Fig. 1). Cervical grooves not visible (Fig. 1). Anus visible, median; anal groove encircling anus anteriorly and converging posteriorly (Fig. 1). Genital groove visible only at posteroventral edge of idiosoma. Stigma subtriangular with small macula (transverse axis 0.120 mm by 0.059 mm) behind right IV coxa.

Capitulum: Length from apices to the posterior margin of basis 0.134 mm. Basis capituli almost rectangular dorsally with posterolateral margins a little divergent anteriorly; posterior margin straight, cornuae absent; ventrally rectangular, posterior margin rounded, length from palpal insertion to the posterior margin of basis 0.064 mm, width 0.151 mm, no auriculae. Palpi short, thick, convex dorsally, much separated at the base, with long axes converging in front; four articles with lengths: trochanter 1, 0.023 mm; femur 2, 0.059 mm; genu 3, 0.040 mm; tibiotarsus 4, 0.017 mm. Hypostome short, bluntly rounded apically, 0.096 mm in length, denticles arranged in 3–4 rows from top to bottom. More detail on the file and number of denticles was not available due to the presence of host-derived tissue on the hypostome. Chelicerae well developed, equal in length to hypostome.

Legs: Coxae subtriangular, internal and external spurs absent, syncoxae present on all coxae. Tarsus I gradually stepped and tarsi II–IV stepped. Trochanter, femur and genu joints of all legs have notch-like processes, and spurs dorsally and ventrally (Fig. 1).

Chaetotaxy: Two setae observed on all leg articles, and four setae associated with Haller's organ. Palps bear small setae on the femur and 4–5 small setae on genu proximate to the joint with the tibiotarsus.

Remarks. Ixodes are currently subdivided into 16 subgenera (Clifford et al., Reference Clifford, Sonenshine, Keirans and Kohls1973; Robbins and Keirans, Reference Robbins and Keirans1992; Durden and Keirans, Reference Durden and Keirans1996). Our new fossil species cannot be placed with confidence in any particular living subgenus as it possesses morphological features consistent with a number of different taxa. The fossil shares a number of morphological aspects with the members of the subgenus Endopalpiger and Exopalpiger: broader than longer scutum with sparse large punctuations (not dense as in Ixodes tasmani Neumann, 1899), blunt scapulae, scutum carinae and cornua absent, and the anal groove and coxae are quite similar. Morphological characters shared with nymphs of Ixodes holocyclus Neumann, 1899 (Sternalixodes) include the trochanter small, round and somewhat salient laterally but visible only ventrally. The sternal plate is absent in the nymph but can be present in females (Durden and Keirans, Reference Durden and Keirans1996). The presence of syncoxae in the fossil is a morphological character observed in adults of some species from the subgenus Endopalpiger and in adults and nymphs of some Sternalixodes species (Roberts, Reference Roberts1960). These ticks possess a type of scutum, broad posteriorly, which appears to be somewhat characteristic of Australian forms. It is observable in Ixodes australiensis Neumann, 1908, Ixodes ornithorhynchi Lucas, 1845 and I. tasmani, and the scutum of the nymph of Ixodes vestitus Neumann, 1908 is of this shape (Roberts, Reference Roberts1960). Like the fossil, some Australian living Ixodes species cannot be easily placed in a subgenus, such as Ixodes barkeri Barker, Reference Barker2019; Ixodes heathi Kwak, Madden and Wicker, 2018; Ixodes woylie Ash et al., 2017; and Ixodes laridis Heath and Palma, 2017 (Barker, Reference Barker2019) based on morphological features.

The hypostome of the fossil could not be described in detail due to a piece of soft tissue from the host that is still attached to this structure (Supplementary Fig. 1). This is the first observation of soft tissue still attached to the hypostome of a fossil tick. The presence of an artefact identified as a possible mammalian hair (Fig. 1) is also of interest and is suggestive of a possible host for this tick species.

The first female fossil for Cornupalpatum

Family Ixodidae Murray, Reference Murray1877

Cornupalpatum burmanicum Poinar and Brown, Reference Poinar and Brown2003

Description of unengorged adult female

Idiosoma: Ornamentation indistinct; body subcircular, length from middle of scutum to posterior body margin: 1.392 mm; maximum width (measured in middle, behind third legs) 1.435 mm; dorsal and ventral surface without setae, but with moderate number of small punctuations (Fig. 2). Scutum can be seen only on the posterior part and seems to be subtriangular (Fig. 2). Eleven festoons. Anus visible, median; anal groove behind the anus, well visible, large ‘V’ shape (Fig. 2). Genital aperture median, forming transverse slit with the edges twisted inward, like a loop, situated between coxae III; spiracle plates comma-shaped, medial and lateral margins parallel, dorsal prolongation long, broad, perpendicular to the anterior–posterior axis, macula, round, situated subterminally; genital groove absent.

Fig. 2. A fossil of a female Cornupalpatum burmanicum (Ixodidae). Indicated are dorsal (up) and ventral (down images). The genital aperture, anus and the posterior V anal groove can be clearly discerned. A dinosaurian feather can be seen on the dorsal side. A line drawing at the bottom indicates important features. The scale bar in all figures is 1 mm.

Capitulum: Length from apices to the posterior margin of basis 0.388 mm; basis capituli posterior margin straight ventrally, hooks on the internal sides of the genu; hypostome length 0.258 mm, columns of teeth on hypostome are 2/2 blunt-tipped teeth, with internal line 6 teeth and external line with 7 teeth; apical end like a wide blade with well-developed lateral hooks oriented anteroposteriorly (Supplementary Fig. 2).

Legs: Coxae I–IV with no obvious spurs; tarsus I tapering distally, clear, oval area on the tarsi I dorsum is Haller's organ; claws paired, slender, simple, slightly curved; with distinct pulvillus visible on some legs.

Chaetotaxy: small setae visible on some legs joint and tarsi I; long setae on the third palpal segment and around the Haller's organ were observed.

Remarks. The present specimen is the first adult female of this species and, like a previous record by Peñalver et al. (Reference Peñalver, Arillo, Delclòs, Peris, Grimaldi, Anderson, Nascimbene and Pérez-de la Fuente2017), it is associated with a feather. On the dorsal side of the tick is the barb of a pennaceous feather. It is 5.903 mm long. Parts of the many barbules are broken; nevertheless, on the distal part of some barbules, hooklets can be seen. The barbules share similar morphology in their attaching base. Distal ramus and the barbules from one side are not visible, probably damaged before having become embedded in the resin. One of the claws on the first leg of the tick fossil grasps a barb from another feather (Supplementary Fig. 3). This provides further support for the hypothesis that C. burmanicum used feathered dinosaurs as hosts (Peñalver et al., Reference Peñalver, Arillo, Delclòs, Peris, Grimaldi, Anderson, Nascimbene and Pérez-de la Fuente2017): both as an immature tick and now potentially as an adult female.

A new Deinocroton species

Family Deinocrotonidae Peñalver, Arillo, Anderson and Pérez-de la Fuente, 2017

Deinocroton Peñalver, Arillo, Anderson and Pérez-de la Fuente, 2017

Deinocroton copia Chitimia-Dobler, Mans and Dunlop sp. nov.

Etymology. From the Latin copia (abundance) to describe the apparent species abundance of this genus in the Myanmar amber deposits.

Holotype. Female (BUB3319) (Fig. 3) deposited in the Munich Paleontological Collection. The species name was registered with Zoobank (LSID code: zoobank.org:act:FEB6E4CC-BE4F-4764-9E23-98F41505DE43).

Fig. 3. Deinocroton copia sp. nov. (Deinocrotonidae) in Burmese amber designated as the holotype for this species. Indicated are dorsal and ventral views. Line drawings indicate pertinent features. The scale bars for the photos are 0.1 mm and for the line drawing 1 mm.

Diagnosis. Female D. copia sp. nov. possess on coxae I a single median spur, coxae II two spurs, medial posterior and distal anterior, and only a single small anterior spur on coxae III and a small median blind spur on coxae IV. Genital aperture between coxae II.

Description of female

Idiosoma: body subcircular; length from middle of pseudoscutum to posterior body margin: 4.018 mm; dorsal and ventral surface with dense mammillae, without discs or sutural line between dorsal and ventral surface (Fig. 3). Pseudoscutum in anterodorsal view is posteriorly broadened, 1.346 mm wide (measured in middle) and 1.063 mm long (from middle to edge); with large punctuations on the lateral sides, cervical grooves absent (Fig. 3); genital aperture between coxae II; anus and spiracles not visible. Eyes and festoons absent.

Capitulum: Capitulum not visible in dorsal view, rectangular ventral 0.180 mm wide and 0.441 long, boarded by the coxae I; hypostome subterminal not well visible; trochanter short and robust, femur longest, distally thickened in width and height, and with a blade-like formation in the middle of the internal side, genu bent ventral direction (creating a ventral concavity, with the surface of the femur) from the joint with the femur, wide and with spinous and transverse processes, tibiotarsus shorter than the femur, sword-like (Fig. 3, Supplementary Video).

Legs: Coxae well developed; coxae I and IV with a median spur, coxae II with two spurs; coxae III with small external spur; trochanter, femur, genu and tarsi articulations with notch-like processes. Dorsal and ventral edges of femur, genu, tibia and tarsi riffled (Supplementary Fig. 4).

Chaetotaxy: No visible setae.

Remarks: Characters that differentiate D. copia sp. nov. from D. draculi derive mainly from the number and locality of the spurs found on the coxae. For coxae I, both species possess a single median spur. For coxae II, D. copia possesses two spurs, medial posterior and distal anterior, while D. draculi possesses three spurs, two medial and one distal anterior. For coxae III and IV, D. draculi presents three spurs, two basal and posterior, and one medial anterior. Deinocroton copia sp. nov. only presents a single small anterior spur on coxae III and a small median blind spur on coxae IV. Genital aperture between coxae II in D. copia and between coxae II and coxae III in D. draculi.

A new tick family

Family Khimairidae Chitimia-Dobler, Mans and Dunlop fam. nov.

This family name was registered with Zoobank (LSID code: zoobank.org:act:E8C0A1D8-1364-46D9-A052-33E700E4FEE8).

Diagnosis. Nymphs with soft body, terminal gnathostoma, dense mammillae on body surface, discs on main body absent, scutum present, sutural line between dorsal and ventral surface and tarsal dorsal humps absent, pulvillus poorly developed.

Khimaira Chitimia-Dobler, Mans and Dunlop gen. nov.

The genus name was registered with Zoobank (LSID code: zoobank.org:act:EE3B8A7C-4470-4D25-9A4C-3ECF01DAB19C).

Etymology. From the ancient Greek khímaira (χῐ́μαιρᾰ), a mythological animal combining parts of more than one creature.

Diagnosis. As for the family.

Khimaira fossus Chitimia-Dobler, Mans and Dunlop gen. et sp. nov.

Etymology. From the Latin fossō (dig), as in a fossil.

Holotype. Nymph (BUB4029) (Fig. 4) deposited in the Munich Paleontological Collection. The species name was registered with Zoobank (LSID code: zoobank.org:act:BED4E24E-8477-4810-9259-F693037FB37D).

Fig. 4. Khimaira fossus gen. et sp. nov. (Khimairidae) in Burmese amber designated as the holotype for this species and the family Khimairida. The terminal gnathostoma, scutum and mammillated alloscutum can be clearly discerned. The line drawing indicates pertinent features. The scale bars for the photos are 0.1 mm and for the line drawing 1 mm.

Diagnosis. As for the family.

Description of nymph

Idiosoma: body oval, length from middle of scutum to posterior body margin: 1.277 mm; dorsal and ventral surface with dense mammillae, without discs or sutural line between dorsal and ventral surface (Fig. 4). Scutum subtriangular, 0.703 mm wide (measured in middle) and 0.522 mm long (from middle to edge); scapulae blunt (Fig. 4). Anus visible, median on the posterior part of idiosoma; anal groove slightly visible, encircling the anus anteriorly closing the sides above the idiosoma edge (Fig. 4). Stigmas located between coxae III and IV, broadly oval, longer axis transverse 0.155 mm × 0.095 mm. Genital aperture absent; genital groove visible posteriorly, on the side of anal groove. Eyes and festoons absent.

Capitulum: Length from apices to the posterior margin of basis 0.534 mm. Basis capituli outline roughly triangular, length from palpal insertion to the posterior margin of basis 0.127 mm, width 0.298 mm, no auriculae. Palpi long; four articles with lengths: trochanter, 0.074 mm; femur, 0.200 mm; genu, 0.093 mm; tibiotarsus, 0.115 mm. Hypostome arising from a flared anterior extension of the basal ‘collar’ of the capitulum, extending to below the level of chelicera distal end and the anterior third of the femur; apex bluntly pointed; dental formula 2/2; chelicera shorter than hypostome.

Legs: long, slender; coxae generally narrow, elongate oval, without spurs; tarsi gradually stepped, without humps; claws long, slender, simple, pulvilli poorly developed (Fig. 4).

Chaetotaxy: No visible setae.

Remarks. This fossil is interpreted as a nymph as it has four pairs of legs, but no genital aperture or porose areas which are specific characters for adult females. It is not a male as it presents a smooth scutum only on the anterior part of the idiosoma. The idiosoma has a leathery cuticle composed of innumerable small mammillae and lacks a lateral sutural line, thus resembling the cuticle of living Ornithodoros ticks in the family Argasidae. The intermammillary space and discs being absent further render it similar to nymphs of the Ornithodoros moubata group (Bakkes et al., Reference Bakkes, de Klerk, Latif and Mans2018). The stigmata that are located between coxae III and IV are also similar to soft ticks, compared to hard ticks where the stigmata are located behind coxae IV.

Despite the similarities to the Ornithodorinae, a remarkable feature of K. fossus gen. et sp. nov. is the fact the gnathosoma is in a terminal position; a character otherwise only seen in ixodid ticks. The gnathosoma of the new species is well-developed and has the second article of palps two times longer than articles 1 and 3. This is specifically seen in extant ixodids belonging to the genus Amblyomma (Nicholson et al., Reference Nicholson, Sonenshine, Lane, Uilenberg, Mullen and Durden2009). The fossil also has a scutum, a feature unique to hard ticks although it is difficult to determine whether the composition of the scutum is sclerotized as observed in hard ticks, or whether it is closer to the semi-sclerotized pseudo-scutum observed for N. namaqua and D. draculi (Latif et al., Reference Latif, Putterill, de Klerk, Pienaar and Mans2012; Peñalver et al., Reference Peñalver, Arillo, Delclòs, Peris, Grimaldi, Anderson, Nascimbene and Pérez-de la Fuente2017). The capitulum of the new fossil has an extended collar around the chelicera and hypostome, similar to larvae of Carios quadridentatus (Heath, Reference Heath2012). The chelicerae are partly visible and seem to have an outer and inner digitus and are shorter than the hypostome of N. namaqua (Latif et al., Reference Latif, Putterill, de Klerk, Pienaar and Mans2012). The mammillated character of the integument differs from that of the Deinocrotonidae and Nuttalliellidae which both present a wrinkled integument with closely spaced pits. Taken together, an argasid-like body with ixodid-like mouthparts represents a unique combination of characters which merit a new, extinct family.

Discussion

Burmese amber originates from the Hukawng Valley in the Kachin State of northern Myanmar. It has been interpreted as a tropical forest environment (Grimaldi et al., Reference Grimaldi, Engel and Nascimbene2002) and is usually dated to the mid-Cretaceous, probably Upper Albian to Lower Cenomanian, or about 100 Ma (Shi et al., Reference Shi, Grimaldi, Harlow, Wang, Wang, Yang, Lei, Li and Li2012; Smith and Ross, Reference Smith and Ross2018). Burmese amber hosts a rich fauna (Ross, Reference Ross2019, Reference Ross2020), predominantly terrestrial arthropods. Debate remains about the precise palaeogeographic position of the locality during the time of amber deposition (Poinar, Reference Poinar2018), which impacts on the question to what extent the flora and fauna had their origins in Gondwana or Laurasia. Westerweel et al. (Reference Westerweel, Roperch, Licht, Dupont-Nivet, Win, Poblete, Ruffet, Swe, Thi and Aung2019) suggested that the Burma terrane was an island within the Trans Tethyian Arc during the mid-Cretaceous. In detail, the Burma terrane forms part of the Incertus Arc that formed ca.155 Ma and was linked to northern Australia and India via the Woyla Arc (Hall, Reference Hall2012). This connection could have provided a short window of land bridges for colonization by Gondwanan elements before the land bridges were destroyed at ca.140 Ma (Hall, Reference Hall2012). Continued northward movement would then place the Burma terrane in the Trans Tethyian Arc by the time of Burmese amber deposition at ca.100 Ma.

Burmese amber hosts the oldest known ticks, as well as the oldest records of two other members of the wider Parasitiformes clade to which the ticks belong: Opilioacarida (Dunlop and Bernardi, Reference Dunlop and Bernardi2014) and Mesostigmata (Joharchi et al., Reference Joharchi, Vorontsov and Walter2021). Given that most arachnids have a fossil record going back to the Palaeozoic, the relatively young (Cretaceous) age of the oldest parasitiform mites is probably an artefact of a lack of appropriate fossil localities for preserving animals of this nature, given that many modern parasitiforms are soil organisms which are less likely to end up in lacustrine environments where they could be buried by sediment. That said, Burmese amber ticks retain their importance by offering (a) the oldest calibration points to date for molecular phylogenies of several living genera, and (b) for demonstrating that during the mid-Cretaceous the tick fauna of the amber forest included what appear to be both modern and extinct genera living side by side. It may be noted that an undescribed immature tick from Spanish amber would push the oldest tick fossils to 105 Ma (Peñalver et al., Reference Peñalver, Arillo, Delclòs, Peris, Grimaldi, Anderson, Nascimbene and Pérez-de la Fuente2017).

With almost 250 living species, Ixodes is the most diverse modern tick genus and contains several species of medical importance, such as the paralysis tick I. holocyclus in Australia and the Lyme disease vectors Ixodes ricinus in the Palearctic and Ixodes scapularis in the Nearctic (Padula et al., Reference Padula, Leister and Webster2020; Gilbert, Reference Gilbert2021). Ixodes antiquorum sp. nov. is the oldest record of Ixodes, predating the Baltic amber species (Weidner, Reference Weidner1964) by more than 50 million years. A further putative (non-amber) Ixodes from the Eocene of Wyoming in the USA is not demonstrably a tick (Dunlop, Reference Dunlop2011). A record of the extant species Ixodes sigelos Keirans, Clifford and Corwin, 1976 from a Holocene owl pellet in Argentina (Sanchez et al., Reference Sanchez, Nava, Lareschi, Ortiz and Guglielmone2010) is the only other unequivocal (sub)fossil in this genus. The presence of Ixodes, and its concomitant clade Prostriata, was to be expected in Burmese amber based on the presence of several genera from its sister-group Metastriata. According to current molecular dating, the split between Prostriata and Metastriata probably occurred considerably earlier at ca. 234 ± 18 Ma (Mans et al., Reference Mans, Featherston, Kvas, Pillay, de Klerk, Pienaar, de Castro, Schwan, Lopez, Teel, Pérez de León, Sonenshine, Egekwu, Bakkes, Heyne, Kanduma, Nyangiwe, Bouattour and Latif2019).

Ixodes is a cosmopolitan genus today, occurring on several continents (Clifford et al., Reference Clifford, Sonenshine, Keirans and Kohls1973; Fukunaga et al., Reference Fukunaga, Yabuki, Hamase, Oliver and Nakao2000). As noted above, I. antiquorum sp. nov. appears to be most closely related to modern Australian species. This is interesting for two reasons. First, it has long been recognized that there is a fundamental difference between Australian Ixodes species and all the other Ixodes, such that the Australian taxa cluster together phylogenetically and some authors even questioned the monophyly of the genus (Fukunaga et al., Reference Fukunaga, Yabuki, Hamase, Oliver and Nakao2000; Klompen et al., Reference Klompen, Black, Keirans and Norris2000, Reference Klompen, Lekveishvili and Black2007; Shao et al., Reference Shao, Barker, Mitani, Aoki and Fukunaga2005). Other studies support a monophyletic Ixodes (Charrier et al., Reference Charrier, Hermouet, Hervet, Agoulon, Barker, Heylen, Toty, McCoy, Plantard and Rispe2019), but the fact remains that there is a deep division between the Australian and non-Australian taxa, with molecular dating suggesting a split at 224 ± 18 Ma (Mans et al., Reference Mans, Featherston, Kvas, Pillay, de Klerk, Pienaar, de Castro, Schwan, Lopez, Teel, Pérez de León, Sonenshine, Egekwu, Bakkes, Heyne, Kanduma, Nyangiwe, Bouattour and Latif2019). The fact that the Burmese amber nymph has Australasian affinities is thus interesting in anchoring this lineage to at least 100 Ma; the non-Australian Ixodes lineage is anchored on the Baltic amber fossil to ca. 49 Ma.

Ixodes antiquorum sp. nov. is also of considerable biogeographical interest and supports the hypothesis that the flora and fauna of Burmese amber have, at least in part, Gondwanan origins (Poinar, Reference Poinar2018). We hypothesize that the ancestors of our new species could have originated in Australia and then migrated onto the Burma Terrane about 155 Ma via the Woyla Arc (Hall, Reference Hall2012) (see also above) before rafting north towards Asia on this terrane. The hypothesis that Burmese amber fossils may have Gondwanan affinities is not new and has been previously discussed (Hall, Reference Hall2012; Yamamoto et al., Reference Yamamoto, Caron and Bortoluzzi2019). Possible Gondwanan origins have been proposed for, e.g. several beetles (Kirejtshuk and Poinar, Reference Kirejtshuk and Poinar2006, Reference Kirejtshuk, Poinar and Azar2013; Cognato and Grimaldi, Reference Cognato and Grimaldi2009; Thayer et al., Reference Thayer, Newton and Chatzimanolis2012; Cai and Huang, Reference Cai and Huang2017; Jałoszyński et al., Reference Jałoszyński, Yamamoto and Takahashi2017; Jarzembowski et al., Reference Jarzembowski, Wang and Zheng2017; Cai et al., Reference Cai, Ślipiński, Leschen, Yin, Zhuo and Huang2018, Reference Cai, Lawrence, Yamamoto, Leschen, Newton, Ślipiński, Yin, Huang and Engel2019; Wu et al., Reference Wu, Li and Ding2018; Yamamoto et al., Reference Yamamoto, Caron and Bortoluzzi2019) and bugs (Poinar and Brown, Reference Poinar and Brown2016).

An alternative hypothesis is that the West Burma block rifted from Australia in the Early-Middle Permian (~270 Ma) and was attached to Asia by the upper Triassic (~200 Ma) (Sevastjanova et al., Reference Sevastjanova, Hall, Rittner, Paw, Naing, Alderton and Comfort2016; Metcalfe, Reference Metcalfe2017; Clarke et al., Reference Clarke, Limaye, McKenna and Oberprieler2019). The fossil species found in Burmese amber would, therefore, have been endemic to the Asiatic region by the time of fossilization ~100 Ma later. If the affinities of I. antiquorum sp. nov. to extant Australian Ixodes lineages have a monophyletic origin, this scenario would suggest a much more ancient origin for Ixodes (>270 Ma) and by implication ticks in general. However, it would not explain the extant restriction of Australasian Ixodes since subsequent dispersal on mainland Asia from 200 Ma would have suggested a much wider distribution for the Australasian Ixodes, given that the lineage leading to the Burmese fossils would have survived in Asia for more than 100 million years. Tick fossils may therefore have important implications for hypotheses on the origin and timing of the West Burma block.

The C. burmanicum female together with a feather barb completes the finding of this tick in amber from larvae (Poinar and Brown, Reference Poinar and Brown2003), a nymph with dinosaur feather (Peñalver et al., Reference Peñalver, Arillo, Delclòs, Peris, Grimaldi, Anderson, Nascimbene and Pérez-de la Fuente2017), and the female from the current study. The barb from a feather found corresponds to a dinosaur feather according to Carroll et al. (Reference Carroll, Chiappe and Bottjer2019). For C. burmanicum, the hooks on the internal side of the third palpal segment in all described stages confirm that these ticks belong to the same species. The finding of two different life stages with dinosaur feathers supports the Peñalver et al. (Reference Peñalver, Arillo, Delclòs, Peris, Grimaldi, Anderson, Nascimbene and Pérez-de la Fuente2017) hypothesis that this tick was a parasite of the Pennaraptora clade of dinosaurs.

While the presence of fossils referable to extant tick genera in Burmese amber points to a considerable degree of evolutionary stasis in some lineages (Amblyomma, Haemaphysalis and now also Ixodes), the discovery of K. fossus gen. et sp. nov. that combines the features of both hard and soft ticks is of considerable interest and importance. There is precedence for ticks in the mid-Cretaceous having body plans, unlike species that we know today. Deinocroton was placed in an extinct family, Deinocrotonidae (Peñalver et al., Reference Peñalver, Arillo, Delclòs, Peris, Grimaldi, Anderson, Nascimbene and Pérez-de la Fuente2017), and differs from living species in the ornamentation of its integument, the shape of the palp and the shapes of the preanal and genital grooves. It may be related to the living family Nuttalliellidae with its single species, Nuttalliella namaqua Bedford, Reference Bedford1931, being termed a ‘living fossil’ since it presents intermediate characters between hard and soft ticks (Bedford, Reference Bedford1931; Mans et al., Reference Mans, de Klerk, Pienaar and Latif2011). In detail, it has an argasid-like body, argasid-like feeding behaviour, but an ixodid-like pseudoscutum and a sub-terminal hypostome (Mans et al., Reference Mans, de Klerk, Pienaar, de Castro and Latif2012). Deinocroton also preserves these pseudoscutum and hypostome characters (Peñalver et al., Reference Peñalver, Arillo, Delclòs, Peris, Grimaldi, Anderson, Nascimbene and Pérez-de la Fuente2017).

Khimaira fossus gen. et sp. nov. is neither a nuttalliellid nor a deinocrotonid. It has a soft, argasid-like body combined with a well-developed, ixodid-like terminal basis capitulum and a scutum. The basis capituli differs completely from the mouthparts of both Deinocrotonidae and Nuttalliellidae which is underdeveloped compared to the Khimairidae. These features, in combination, are so distinct and incongruous with respect to the known families (living and extinct) that we believe the new fossil merits its own family (Khimairidae fam. nov.) since it seems to be a truly chimaeric fusion of a hard and soft tick. This makes it a much likelier candidate than either deinocrotonids or nuttalliellids of being a last common ancestral lineage to the two main living tick families. With regard to its biology, the soft body suggests that both nymphal and adult stages would have exhibited rapid feeding behaviour, as observed for living Argasidae and Nuttalliellidae (Mans et al., Reference Mans, de Castro, Pienaar, de Klerk, Gaven, Genu and Latif2016). By contrast, the terminal gnathosoma would imply that larvae may have undergone prolonged feeding, as observed in some members of Argasidae and all Ixodidae and Nuttalliellidae. This suggests that, as in the Nuttalliellidae, the ancestral biology of ticks is represented by larvae that showed prolonged feeding, with nymphs and adults showing rapid feeding (Mans et al., Reference Mans, de Castro, Pienaar, de Klerk, Gaven, Genu and Latif2016). As such, Khimairidae, like Nuttalliellidae, presents characters shared among argasids and ixodids and may explain the striking differences in the biology of the two main tick families through sub-functionalization after they diverged from one another.

Khimaira fossus gen. et sp. nov. is mid-Cretaceous in age, but the Ixodidae/Argasidae split must predate the Prostriata/Metastriata one (see above), with published mitochondrial gene molecular dates for the origins of the two main families ranging in the literature from the Early to Late Permian: 290 ± 23 to 260 ± 21 Ma (Mans et al., Reference Mans, de Klerk, Pienaar, de Castro and Latif2012, Reference Mans, Featherston, Kvas, Pillay, de Klerk, Pienaar, de Castro, Schwan, Lopez, Teel, Pérez de León, Sonenshine, Egekwu, Bakkes, Heyne, Kanduma, Nyangiwe, Bouattour and Latif2019). In this scheme, all the major tick lineages found in Burmese amber originated well in advance of the formation of the Incertus Arc at 155 Ma. These include Ixodes (224 ± 18 Ma), Amblyomma (144 ± 12 Ma) and Haemaphysalis (173 ± 14 Ma) (Mans et al., Reference Mans, Featherston, Kvas, Pillay, de Klerk, Pienaar, de Castro, Schwan, Lopez, Teel, Pérez de León, Sonenshine, Egekwu, Bakkes, Heyne, Kanduma, Nyangiwe, Bouattour and Latif2019), which would have allowed dispersal and occupation of the Burma terrane by these lineages from Australia. Based on this scenario, Gondwanan lineages that also originated before the formation of the Incertus Arc might also be expected in Burmese amber. This would include Bothriocrotoninae (180 ± 15 Ma) as well as Argasidae (223 ± 20 Ma); the latter potentially supported by the presence of an ornithodorid tick in New Jersey amber (Klompen and Grimaldi, Reference Klompen and Grimaldi2001). The presence of Bothriocrotoninae in Burmese amber would offer particularly strong support for the colonization of the Incertus Arc from Australia. Conversely, the presence of Deinocrotonidae and Khimairidae in Australian amber deposits (if these could be discovered) would be further support of this hypothesis.

A much younger origination date for ticks has been postulated in the Jurassic ~192 ± 50 Ma (Beati and Klompen, Reference Beati and Klompen2019), with the split between Ixodidae and Argasidae at ~178 ± 50 Ma. However, in this molecular dating based on the nuclear 18S rRNA gene, the prostriates originate at ~112 ± 50 Ma, metastriates at ~97 ± 12 Ma, Amblyomminae at ~71 ± 25 Ma and Haemaphysalinae at ~33 ± 25 Ma (Beati and Klompen, Reference Beati and Klompen2019). Given that fossils assignable to Ixodes (this study), Amblyomma and Haemaphysalis have already been found in 100 Ma Burmese amber (Chitimia-Dobler et al., Reference Chitimia-Dobler, Cancian de Araujo, Ruthensteiner, Pfeffer and Dunlop2017, Reference Chitimia-Dobler, Pfeffer and Dunlop2018), the nuclear clock seems to underestimate divergence times for ticks, which suggests in turn that the origin of ticks may actually lie somewhat earlier, perhaps between 273 and 192 Ma (i.e. mid-Permian to Early Jurassic). Again this underscores the importance of Burmese amber tick fossils for our understanding of tick origins and evolution.

Given its relatively young age, our new fossil is unlikely to be directly ancestral to either of the modern families (Fig. 5). Instead, we suspect there was a late Palaeozoic, or perhaps early Mesozoic, lineage from which both Ixodidae and Argasidae evolved and that K. fossus gen. et sp. nov. is part of this group and retained these intermediate character states through into the late Mesozoic. A similar scenario from Burmese amber was observed in the remarkable tailed spider Chimerarachne yingae (Wang et al., Reference Wang, Dunlop, Selden, Garwood, Shear, Müller and Lei2018). This extinct species retains several plesiomorphic character states for spiders (Huang et al., Reference Huang, Hormiga, Cai, Su, Yin, Xia and Giribet2018; Wang et al., Reference Wang, Dunlop, Selden, Garwood, Shear, Müller and Lei2018) most obviously the retention of a flagelliform telson, but cannot be directly ancestral to other Araneae as spiders referable to the extant clade Mesothelae were already present in the Late Carboniferous. We hypothesize that the mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber hosted late survivors of earlier radiations of at least the ticks and spiders among the arachnids, and it would be interesting to see if this is true of any other arachnid groups. Examples of unusual Burmese amber insects with character combinations not seen in living groups are also known (Bai et al., Reference Bai, Beutel, Klass, Zhang, Yang and Wipfler2016; Poinar and Brown, Reference Poinar and Brown2017), and may represent further examples of relict arthropod taxa which maintained a presence until near the end of the Mesozoic – at least on the putative island hosting the Burmese amber forest.

Fig. 5. A representation of the possible systematic relationships among living and extinct tick families adapted from Peñalver et al. (Reference Peñalver, Arillo, Delclòs, Peris, Grimaldi, Anderson, Nascimbene and Pérez-de la Fuente2017) and Mans et al. (Reference Mans, Featherston, Kvas, Pillay, de Klerk, Pienaar, de Castro, Schwan, Lopez, Teel, Pérez de León, Sonenshine, Egekwu, Bakkes, Heyne, Kanduma, Nyangiwe, Bouattour and Latif2019). Extinct lineages are depicted by red branches, while the potential divergence points for the Khimairidae are indicated as sister lineage to the Ixodidae/Argasidae (preferred placement), or the Ixodidae, or the Argasidae.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0031182022000269.

Data

The data reported in this paper are detailed in the main text.

Acknowledgements

We thank Patrick Müller for initially making much of this material available for study. This research was supported using resources of the VetCore Facility (Imaging) of the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna.

Author contributions

L.C.-D. took the photos and described the species; B.J.M. contributed to the description and interpreted the tick evolution; S.H. made the microCT scanning providing images and videos for the description; J.A.D. made the drawing for all specimens. L.C.-D., B.J.M. and J.A.D. wrote the manuscript. All authors read and proofed the final version of the manuscript.

Financial support

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

Conflict of interest

None.

References

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, 317326.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bakkes, DK, de Klerk, D, Latif, AA and Mans, BJ (2018) Integrative taxonomy of Afrotropical Ornithodoros (Ornithodoros) (Acari: Ixodida: Argasidae). Ticks and Tick Borne Diseases 9, 10061037.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barker, D (2019) Ixodes barkeri n. sp. (Acari: Ixodidae) from the short-beaked echidna, Tachyglossus aculeatus, with a revised key to the male Ixodes of Australia, and list of the subgenera and species of Ixodes known to occur in Australia. Zootaxa 4658, 331342.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beati, L and Klompen, H (2019) Phylogeography of ticks (Acari: Ixodida). Annual Review in Entomology 64, 379397.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bedford, GAH (1931) Nuttalliella namaqua, a new genus and species of tick. Parasitology 23, 230232.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cai, C and Huang, D (2017) First fossil Coloninae from Upper Cretaceous Burmese amber (Coleoptera: Staphylinoidea: Leiodidae). Cretaceous Research 77, 6974.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cai, C, Ślipiński, A, Leschen, RA, Yin, Z, Zhuo, D and Huang, D (2018) The first Mesozoic Jacobson's beetle (Coleoptera: Jacobsoniidae) in Cretaceous Burmese amber and biogeographical stasis. Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 16, 543550.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cai, C, Lawrence, JF, Yamamoto, S, Leschen, RAB, Newton, AF, Ślipiński, A, Yin, Z, Huang, D and Engel, MS (2019) Basal polyphagan beetles in mid-Cretaceous amber from Myanmar: biogeographic implications and long-term morphological stasis. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 286, 20182175.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Carroll, NR, Chiappe, LM and Bottjer, DJ (2019) Mid-Cretaceous amber inclusions reveal morphogenesis of extinct rachis-dominated feathers. Scientific Reports 9, 18108.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Charrier, NP, Hermouet, A, Hervet, C, Agoulon, A, Barker, SC, Heylen, D, Toty, C, McCoy, KD, Plantard, O and Rispe, C (2019) A transcriptome-based study of hard ticks (Ixodidae). Scientific Reports 9, 12923.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chitimia-Dobler, L, Cancian de Araujo, B, Ruthensteiner, B, Pfeffer, T and Dunlop, JA (2017) Amblyomma birmitum a new species of hard tick in Burmese amber. Parasitology 144, 14411448.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chitimia-Dobler, L, Pfeffer, T and Dunlop, JA (2018) Haemaphysalis cretacea a nymph of a new species of hard tick in Burmese amber. Parasitology 145, 14401451.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Clarke, DJ, Limaye, A, McKenna, DD and Oberprieler, RG (2019) The weevil fauna preserved in Burmese amber – snapshot of a unique, extinct lineage (Coleoptera: Curculionoidea). Diversity 11, 1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clifford, CM, Sonenshine, DE, Keirans, JE and Kohls, GM (1973) Systematics of the subfamily Ixodinae (Acarina: Ixodidae). I. The subgenera of Ixodes. Annals of the Entomological Society of America 66, 489500.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cognato, AI and Grimaldi, D (2009) 100 million years of morphological conservation in bark beetles (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Scolytinae). Systematic Entomology 34, 93100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunlop, JA (2011) The fate and status of the supposed fossil tick Ixodes tertiarius Scudder, 1885. Acarologia 51, 399404.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunlop, JA and Bernardi, LFdeO (2014) An opilioacarid mite in Cretaceous Burmese amber. Naturwissenschaften 101, 759763.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dunlop, JA, Apanaskevich, DA, Lehmann, J, Hoffmann, R, Fusseis, F, Ehlke, M, Zachow, S and Xiao, X (2016) Microtomography of the Baltic amber tick Ixodes succineus reveals affinities with the modern Asian disease vector Ixodes ovatus. BMC Evolutionary Biology 16, 203.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Durden, LA and Keirans, JE (1996) Nymphs of the Genus Ixodes (Acari: Ixodidae) of the United States: Taxonomy, Identification Key, Distribution, Hosts, and Medical/Veterinary Importance. Lanham, MD: Entomological Society of America, 95pp.Google Scholar
Fukunaga, M, Yabuki, M, Hamase, A, Oliver, JH and Nakao, M (2000) Molecular phylogenetic analysis of ixodid ticks based on the ribosomal DNA spacer, internal transcribed spacer 2, sequences. Journal of Parasitology 86, 3843.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gilbert, L (2021) The impacts of climate change on ticks and tick-borne disease risk. Annual Review in Entomology 66, 373388.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grimaldi, D, Engel, MS and Nascimbene, P (2002) Fossiliferous Cretaceous amber from Myanmar (Burma): its rediscovery, biotic diversity, and paleontological significance. American Museum Novitates 3361, 172.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall, R (2012) Late Jurassic–Cenozoic reconstructions of the Indonesian region and the Indian Ocean. Tectonophysics 570–571, 141.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heath, ACG (2012) A new species of soft tick (Ixodoidea: Argasidae) from the New Zealand lesser short-tailed bat, Mystacina tuberculata Gray. Tuhinga 23, 2937.Google Scholar
Huang, D, Hormiga, G, Cai, C, Su, Y, Yin, Z, Xia, F and Giribet, G (2018) Origin of spiders and their spinning organs illuminated by mid-Cretaceous amber fossils. Nature Ecology and Evolution 2, 623627.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jałoszyński, P, Yamamoto, S and Takahashi, Y (2017) Discovery of a new Mesozoic species of the ancient genus Lepicerus (Coleoptera: Myxophaga: Lepiceridae), with implications for the systematic placement of all previously described extinct ‘lepiceroids’. Cretaceous Research 78, 95102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jarzembowski, EA, Wang, B and Zheng, D (2017) A new ommatin beetle (Insecta: Coleoptera) with unusual genitalia from mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber: ommatin beetle Burmese amber. Cretaceous Research 71, 113117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Joharchi, O, Vorontsov, D and Walter, D (2021) Oldest determined record of a mesostigmatic mite (Acari: Mesostigmata: Sejidae) in Cretaceous Burmese amber. Acarologia 61, 641649.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirejtshuk, AG and Poinar, GO Jr. (2006) Haplochelidae, a new family of Cretaceous beetles (Coleoptera: Myxophaga) from Burmese amber. Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington 108, 155164.Google Scholar
Kirejtshuk, AG and Poinar, GO Jr. (2013) On the systematic position of the genera Lepiceroides gen. n. and Haplochelus, with notes on the taxonomy and phylogeny of the Myxophaga (Coleoptera). In Azar, D (ed.), Insect Evolution in an Amberiferous and Stone Alphabet. Leiden: Brill, pp. 5569.Google Scholar
Klompen, H and Grimaldi, D (2001) First Mesozoic record of a parasitiform mite: a larval argasid tick in Cretaceous amber (Acari: Ixodida: Argasidae). Annals of the Entomological Society of America 94, 1015.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klompen, J, Black, W, Keirans, JE and Norris, DE (2000) Systematics and biogeography of hard ticks, a total evidence approach. Cladistics 16, 79102.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Klompen, H, Lekveishvili, M and Black, WC (2007) Phylogeny of parasitiform mites (Acari) based on rRNA. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 43, 936951.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lamarck, JB (1801) Systême des animaux sans vertèbres, ou Tableau général desclasses, des ordres et des genres de ces animaux. Chez L'auteur, au Muséum d'Hist. Naturelle, Paris, pp. 1–472.Google Scholar
Lane, RS and Poinar, GO Jr. (1986) First fossil tick (Acari: Ixodidae) in New World amber. International Journal of Acarology 12, 7578.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Latif, AA, Putterill, JF, de Klerk, DG, Pienaar, R and Mans, BJ (2012) Nuttalliella namaqua (Ixodoidea: Nuttalliellidae): first description of the male, immature stages and re-description of the female. PLoS ONE 7, e41651.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Latreille, PA (1795) Entomologie. Magazin Encyclopedique 1, 1519.Google Scholar
Leach, WE (1815) A tabular view of the external characters of four classes of animals, which Linné arranged under Insecta; with the distribution of the genera composing three of these classes into orders, &c. and descriptions of several new genera and species. Transactions of the Linnean Society of London 11, 306400.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mans, BJ, de Klerk, D, Pienaar, R and Latif, AA (2011) Nuttalliella namaqua: a living fossil and closest relative to the ancestral tick lineage: implications for the evolution of blood-feeding in ticks. PLoS ONE 6, e23675.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mans, BJ, de Klerk, D, Pienaar, R, de Castro, MH and Latif, AA (2012) The mitochondrial genomes of Nuttalliella namaqua (Ixodoidea: Nuttalliellidae) and Argas africolumbae (Ixodoidea: Argasidae): estimation of divergence dates for the major tick lineages and reconstruction of ancestral blood-feeding characteristics. PLoS ONE 7, e4946.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mans, BJ, de Castro, MH, Pienaar, R, de Klerk, D, Gaven, P, Genu, S and Latif, AA (2016) Ancestral reconstruction of tick lineages. Ticks and Tick Borne Diseases 7, 509535.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mans, BJ, Featherston, J, Kvas, M, Pillay, K, de Klerk, DG, Pienaar, R, de Castro, MH, Schwan, TG, Lopez, JE, Teel, P, Pérez de León, AA, Sonenshine, DE, Egekwu, NI, Bakkes, DK, Heyne, H, Kanduma, EG, Nyangiwe, N, Bouattour, A and Latif, AA (2019) Argasid and ixodid systematics: implications for soft tick evolution and systematics, with a new argasid species list. Ticks Tick-borne Diseases 10, 219240.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Metcalfe, I (2017) Tectonic evolution of Sundaland. Bulletin of the Geological Society of Malaysia 63, 2760.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murray, A (1877) Economic Entomology. London: Chapman and Hall, pp. 190207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nicholson, WL, Sonenshine, DE, Lane, RS and Uilenberg, G (2009) Ticks (Ixodida). In Mullen, GR and Durden, LA (eds), Medical and Veterinary Entomology, 2nd Edn. New York: Academic Press, pp. 493542.Google Scholar
Padula, AM, Leister, EM and Webster, RA (2020) Tick paralysis in dogs and cats in Australia: treatment and prevention deliverables from 100 years of research. Australian Veterinary Journal 98, 5359.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Peñalver, E, Arillo, A, Delclòs, X, Peris, D, Grimaldi, DA, Anderson, SR, Nascimbene, PC and Pérez-de la Fuente, R (2017) Parasitised feathered dinosaurs as revealed by Cretaceous amber assemblages. Nature Communications 8, 1024.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Peris, D, Solórzano Kraemer, MM, Peñalver, E and Delclòs, X (2015) New ambrosia beetles (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Platypodinae) from Miocene Mexican and Dominican ambers and their paleobiogeographical implications. Organisms Diversity and Evolution 15, 527542.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poinar, GO Jr. (1995) First fossil soft tick, Ornithodoros antiquus n. sp. (Acari: Argasidae) in Dominican amber with evidence of their mammalian host. Experimentia 51, 584587.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poinar, GO Jr. (2018) Burmese amber: evidence of Gondwanan origin and Cretaceous dispersion. Historical Biology 31, 13041309.Google Scholar
Poinar, GO Jr. and Brown, AE (2003) A new genus of hard ticks in Cretaceous Burmese amber (Acari: Ixodida: Ixodidae). Systematic Parasitology 54, 199205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poinar, GO Jr. and Brown, AE (2016) Toad bugs (Hemiptera: Gelastocoridae) in Myanmar amber. Cretaceous Research 63, 39e44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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, 100104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poinar, GO Jr. and Buckley, R (2008) Compluriscutula vetulum (Acari: Ixodida: Ixodidae), a new genus and species of hard tick from Lower Cretaceous Burmese Amber. Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington 110, 445450.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reuter, ER (1909) Morphologie und Ontogenie der Acariden mit besonderer Berücksichtigung von Pediculopsis graminum (E. Reut.). Acta Societatis Scientiarum Fennicae 36, 1288.Google Scholar
Robbins, RG and Keirans, JE (1992) Systematics and Ecology of the Subgenus Ixodiopsis (Acari: Ixodidae: Ixodes), vol. XIV. Lanham, MD: Entomological Society of America, p. 159.Google Scholar
Roberts, FHS (1960) A Systematic Study of the Australian Species of the Genus Ixodes (Acarina: Ixodidae). Yeerongpilly, Qld.: Division of Animal Health, C.S.I.R.O., Veterinary Parasitology Laboratory, pp. 392485.Google Scholar
Ross, AJ (2019) Burmese (Myanmar) amber checklist and bibliography 2018. Palaeoentomology 2, 2284.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ross, AJ (2020) Supplement to the Burmese (Myanmar) amber checklist and bibliography, 2019. Palaeoentomology 3, 103118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sanchez, JP, Nava, S, Lareschi, M, Ortiz, PE and Guglielmone, AA (2010) Finding of an ixodid tick inside a late Holocene owl pellet from northwestern Argentina. Journal of Parasitology 96, 820822.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sevastjanova, I, Hall, R, Rittner, M, Paw, SMTL, Naing, TT, Alderton, DH and Comfort, D (2016) Myanmar and Asia united, Australia left behind long ago. Gondwana Research 32, 2440.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shao, R, Barker, SC, Mitani, H, Aoki, Y and Fukunaga, M (2005) Evolution of duplicate control regions in the mitochondrial genomes of metazoa: a case study with Australasian Ixodes ticks. Molecular Biology and Evolution 22, 620629.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shi, G, Grimaldi, DA, Harlow, GE, Wang, J, Wang, J, Yang, M, Lei, W, Li, Q and Li, X (2012) Age constraint on Burmese amber based on U–Pb dating of zircons. Cretaceous Research 37, 155163.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, RDA and Ross, AJ (2018) Amberground pholadid bivalve borings and inclusions in Burmese amber: implications for proximity of resin-producing forests to brackish waters, and the age of the amber. Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 107, 239247.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sonenshine, D and Roe, RM (eds) (2013) Biology of Ticks, 2nd Edn. Bands 1–2. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Thayer, MK, Newton, AF and Chatzimanolis, S (2012) Prosolierius, a new mid-Cretaceous genus of Solieriinae (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae) with three new species from Burmese amber. Cretaceous Research 34, 124134.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wang, B, Dunlop, JA, Selden, PA, Garwood, RJ, Shear, WA, Müller, P and Lei, X (2018) Cretaceous arachnid Chimerarachne yingi gen. et sp. nov. illuminates spider origins. Nature Ecology and Evolution 2, 614622.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Weidner, H (1964) Eine Zecke, Ixodes succineus sp. n., im baltischen Bernstein. Veröffentlichungen aus dem Übersee-Museum Bremen 3, 143151.Google Scholar
Westerweel, J, Roperch, P, Licht, A, Dupont-Nivet, G, Win, Z, Poblete, F, Ruffet, G, Swe, HH, Thi, MK and Aung, DW (2019) Burma Terrane part of the Trans-Tethyan arc during collision with India according to palaeomagnetic data. Nature Geoscience 12, 863868.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wu, H, Li, L and Ding, M (2018) The first cyclaxyrid beetle from Upper Cretaceous Burmese amber (Coleoptera: Cucujoidea: Cyclaxyridae). Cretaceous Research 91, 6670.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yamamoto, S, Caron, E and Bortoluzzi, S (2019) Propiestus archaicus, the first Mesozoic amber inclusion of piestine rove beetles and its evolutionary and biogeographical significance (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Piestinae). Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 17, 12571270.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Ixodes antiquorum sp. nov. (Ixodidae) from Burmese amber designated as the holotype for this species. Indicated are dorsal (left) and ventral (right) images. The absence of festoons and the anterior anal groove can be clearly discerned. Arrows indicate the presence of notch-like processes on the joints. Line drawings at the bottom indicate important aspects described in the text. Scale bars indicated are 0.1 mm for the photos and 1 mm for line drawings.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. A fossil of a female Cornupalpatum burmanicum (Ixodidae). Indicated are dorsal (up) and ventral (down images). The genital aperture, anus and the posterior V anal groove can be clearly discerned. A dinosaurian feather can be seen on the dorsal side. A line drawing at the bottom indicates important features. The scale bar in all figures is 1 mm.

Figure 2

Fig. 3. Deinocroton copia sp. nov. (Deinocrotonidae) in Burmese amber designated as the holotype for this species. Indicated are dorsal and ventral views. Line drawings indicate pertinent features. The scale bars for the photos are 0.1 mm and for the line drawing 1 mm.

Figure 3

Fig. 4. Khimaira fossus gen. et sp. nov. (Khimairidae) in Burmese amber designated as the holotype for this species and the family Khimairida. The terminal gnathostoma, scutum and mammillated alloscutum can be clearly discerned. The line drawing indicates pertinent features. The scale bars for the photos are 0.1 mm and for the line drawing 1 mm.

Figure 4

Fig. 5. A representation of the possible systematic relationships among living and extinct tick families adapted from Peñalver et al. (2017) and Mans et al. (2019). Extinct lineages are depicted by red branches, while the potential divergence points for the Khimairidae are indicated as sister lineage to the Ixodidae/Argasidae (preferred placement), or the Ixodidae, or the Argasidae.

Supplementary material: File

Chitimia-Dobler et al. supplementary material

Chitimia-Dobler et al. supplementary material 1

Download Chitimia-Dobler et al. supplementary material(File)
File 12.4 MB

Chitimia-Dobler et al. supplementary material

Chitimia-Dobler et al. supplementary material 2

Download Chitimia-Dobler et al. supplementary material(Video)
Video 6.7 MB