Forty nine million year old cockroach fossil found
18 Jan Fox news
A common European and African cockroach may have gotten its
evolutionary start in North America, according to new fossil findings.
More than 70 species of cockroaches in the genus Ectobius currently
crawl through Europe and Africa, making them amongst the most common
cockroaches in that part of the world. They measure only about 0.25 to
0.5 inches long, considerably smaller than the American cockroaches
(Periplaneta Americana) that can grow to about 1.5 in. long and plague
major cities and small towns across the United States.
Researchers have previously thought that Ectobius first evolved in
Europe and Africa, scuttling around the region since at least 44 million
years ago, based on a specimen preserved in Baltic amber of this age.
Now, researchers based at the Slovak Academy of Sciences have discovered
49-million-year-old fossils of four different Ectobius species in
northwest Colorado, pushing back the insects’ first appearance on Earth
by roughly 5 million years and its place of origin as modern-day United
States rather than the Old World.
The ancient species discovered in sedimentary rocks dating back to a
warm, humid geologic epoch known as the Eocene have since gone extinct,
for reasons that remain unclear to the researchers. However, over the
past 70 years or so, at least four different Ectobius species have made
their way into parts of the United States and Canada. “It was always
assumed that these four newcomers were the first Ectobius species to
have ever lived in North America,” study co-author Conrad Labandeira of
the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History said in
a statement. “But the discovery in Colorado proves that their relatives
were here nearly 50 million years ago.”
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