PEÑALVER E., PERIS D., ÁLVAREZ-PARRA S., GRIMALDI D. A., ARILLO A., CHIAPPE L., DELCLÓS X., ALCALÁ L., SANZ J. L., SLÓRZANO-KRAEMER M. M. & PÉREZ-DE LA FUENTE R. 2023: Symbiosis between Cretaceous dinosaurs and feather-feeding beetles.

  • Author(s): Peñalver, Enrique; Peris, David; Álvarez-Parra, Sergio; Grimaldi, David A.; Arillo, Antonio; Chiappe, Luis; Delclòs, Xavier; Alcalá, Luis; Sanz, José Luis; Solórzano-Kraemer, Mónica M.; Fuente, Ricardo
  • Title:
    Symbiosis between Cretaceous dinosaurs and feather-feeding beetles
  • Journal Title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
  • DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2217872120
  • URL: https://pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2217872120
  • Volume: 120
  • Issue: 17
  • Page(s): e2217872120
  • Date: 2023-04-25
  • Keywords:
  • License:
  • Abstract:
    Extant terrestrial vertebrates, including birds, have a panoply of symbiotic relationships with many insects and arachnids, such as parasitism or mutualism. Yet, identifying arthropod–vertebrate symbioses in the fossil record has been based largely on indirect evidence; findings of direct association between arthropod guests and dinosaur host remains are exceedingly scarce. Here, we present direct and indirect evidence demonstrating that beetle larvae fed on feathers from an undetermined theropod host (avian or nonavian) 105 million y ago. An exceptional amber assemblage is reported of larval molts (exuviae) intimately associated with plumulaceous feather and other remains, as well as three additional amber pieces preserving isolated conspecific exuviae. Samples were found in the roughly coeval Spanish amber deposits of El Soplao, San Just, and Peñacerrada I. Integration of the morphological, systematic, and taphonomic data shows that the beetle larval exuviae, belonging to three developmental stages, are most consistent with skin/hide beetles (family Dermestidae), an ecologically important group with extant keratophagous species that commonly inhabit bird and mammal nests. These findings show that a symbiotic relationship involving keratophagy comparable to that of beetles and birds in current ecosystems existed between their Early Cretaceous relatives.
  • ISSN: 0027-8424, 1091-6490
  • Document Type: Journal Article
  • Language: english
  • Citation Key: penalver_symbiosis_2023

Links & Files

Dermestidae Atlas database is made available under the Open Database License (ODbL). Any rights in individual contents of the database are licensed under the Database Contents License (DbCL).
The copyright for referenced articles and other external content remains with the original authors and publishers (if present, see specified license).