Butterflies live on earth since earlier than we thought, says new study

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Butterflies live on earth since earlier than we thought, says new research
Butterflies live on earth since earlier than we thought, says new research

Researchers have discovered the tiny fragments of fossil butterfly scales in more than 200 million-year-old rock cores. A few fossils which are too tiny to identify with the naked eye, have revealed the interesting history of the evolution of moths and butterflies.

Researchers say they can learn more about the conservation of butterflies and moths by studying their early evolution. They used acid to dissolve ancient rocks, leaving behind small fragments, including “perfectly preserved” scales that covered the wings of early moths and butterflies. “We found the microscopic remains of these organisms in the form of these scales,” said Dr Bas van de Schootbrugge from Utrecht University in the Netherlands. Intriguingly, they show that some of the moths and butterflies belonged to a group still alive today that have long straw-like tongues for sucking up nectar.

“These finds push back the evolution of this group with proboscises – with a tongue – by about 70 million years,” said Dr van de Schootbrugge. “Our finds show that the group that was supposed to co-evolve with flowers is actually much older.” The Jurassic was a world dominated by gymnosperm plants, such as conifers, which produced sugary nectar to capture pollen from the air. The primitive insects may have fed on this nectar, before flowering plants came along around 130 million years ago. Dr Russell Garwood of the University of Manchester, who is not connected with the study, said it had always been assumed that coiled mouthparts had evolved alongside the flowers that these animals pollinate. “This new evidence suggests that perhaps the coiled mouthparts had another role, before flowering plants evolved,” he said. The study, published in the journal Science Advances, gives clues to how butterflies and moths became so widespread, thriving on every continent except Antarctica. The early Lepidopterans survived the mass extinction at the end of the Triassic, which wiped out many other living things. This knowledge will help inform modern conservation efforts, said Dr Timo van Eldijk, also of Utrecht University, the lead researcher on the study. The information is “paramount to help us piece together how current manmade climate change might affect insects and their evolution in the future”, he said.

Butterflies and moths are fragile creatures, meaning fossil evidence is rare. Scientists have relied largely on DNA evidence from modern butterflies and moths, which can be used to make an evolutionary tree of life.

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