Introduction
The Psocodea (Psocoptera + Phthiraptera) is a rather small order with about 10,000 valid extant species. Earlier, fossils from the Permian were assigned to the Psocodea but the attribution of these is uncertain. The first unquestionable records of psocodeans are from the Middle Jurassic of China (Huang et al. 2008). The Psyllipsocidae are a relatively small family of trogiomorphan psocathropetan Psocodea, including about 50 extant species in five genera distributed worldwide. Psyllipsocids live in caves, on rock surfaces, and among dead leaves. To date four fossils have been assigned to Psyllipsocidae: Psyllipsocus eocenicus Nel et al., 2005 (lowermost Eocene French Oise amber), ?Psyllipsocus banksi Cockerell, 1916 (mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber), a ”Psyllipsocus sp. (nymph)“ from Lower Miocene Mexican amber (Mockford 1969), and Khatangia inclusa Vishniakova, 1975 (Late Cretaceous Taimyr amber) but the last three attributions to Psyllipsocidae are dubious and require revision.
The Lower Cretaceous Lebanese amber is so far the oldest (Neocomian) with complete macroscopic biological inclusions (Azar 2007). Its formation corresponds to the epoch of the origin and rise of flowering plants, a critical period for the study of the evolution, with extinction of many ancient insect groups and emergence of effectively modern lineages. Up to now nine species of psocids have been described from Lebanese amber (Perrichot et al. 2003; Azar and Nel 2004; Grimaldi and Engel 2006; Azar et al. 2008, 2010).
Herein a new psyllipsocid genus and species is described from the Lower Cretaceous amber of Lebanon, representing the earliest record of this family.
Material and methods
The amber piece containing the inclusion was cut, shaped, and polished, before preparations between two coverslips and in a Canada balsam medium, as described in Azar et al. (2003). The specimen was examined with a Nikon SZ10 stereomicroscope and a Leitz Laborlux-12 compound microscope, both equipped with camera lucida for line drawings. Photographs were made with an Olympus FE-5000 digital camera.
The works of (Smithers (1972, 1990), Lienhard (1998) and Mockford (1993) are followed herein for the systematics of Psocodea. The wing venation nomenclature and terminology of body structures of Smithers (1972) and Lienhard (1998) were adopted.
Discussion
Following the keys of Smithers (1972), Mockford (1993), and Lienhard (1998), Libanopsyllipsocus alexanderasnitsyni gen. et sp. n. would fall into Trogiomorpha and can be placed in Psyllipsocidae owing to the following combination of characters, considered diagnostic of the family (Smithers 1972, 1990; Mockford 1993; Lienhard 1998), and present in the current fossil: head elongate; hypopharynx with two distinct sclerotized filaments; presence of nodulus; posterior legs with tibia + tarsi longer than abdomen; tarsi three-segmented; distal pretarsi with claw bearing preapical tooth, without pulvillus; paraproct with anal spine; phallosome with two curved arms not fused anteriorly. Other diagnostic characters of the family Psyllipsocidae could be present but cannot be seen in the specimen owing to the state of preservation, i.e., some parts of the animal are missing.
Our fossil presents a striking and astonishing similarity in some of the wing features (like elongate areola postica and M 2-branched in forewing) with the psocids belonging to the troctomorphan family Pachytroctidae, to the point that any psocidologist at first glance to the specimen would assign it to this family, and as in Pachytroctidae only females could be winged, he would tell directly that this is a female! A minute examination of the specimen shows that the fossil is a male with genitalia structure comparable to those of Psyllipsocidae as figured by Lienhard (1998: 112, fig. 32b) with the very particular conical phallosome directed forwards. Moreover, our fossil could not belong to the Pachytroctidae for several reasons: (1) in the forewing Cu2 and A are meeting together on the wing margin thus forming a nodulus, the absence of this feature being characteristic for Pachytroctidae; (2) presence of Pearman’s coxal organ in hind legs, here too the absence of this feature is characteristic of the Pachytroctidae (Yoshizawa and Lienhard 2010), and even for the whole Nanopsocetae that include this family; (3) presence of distinct separated sclerotized filaments of hypopharynx characteristic of all Trogiomorpha, whereas in Troctomorpha (that enclose Pachytroctidae) these filaments are fused.
Our fossil shows a derived character for its hind wing with M simple, though the majority of the fully-winged extant species of Psyllipsocidae, like most of the trogiomorphan psocids, have hind wings with M forked (a feature considered plesiomorphic in general for the Psocodea).
Libanopsyllipsocus gen. n. differs from all modern genera by several features of its wings; i.e., from the genera Dorypteryx Aaron, 1899 and Psocathropos Ribaga, 1899 by the glabrous anterior margin of the forewing; from Pseudodorypteryx García-Aldrete, 1984 and Dorypteryx Aaron, 1899 by the broad forewing. Libanopsyllipsocus gen. n. resembles mostly the genus Psyllipsocus Sélys-Longchamps, 1872 but differs from it in its forewing without a pterostigma and M two-branched, and in its hind wing with R1 absent and M simple. Libanopsyllipsocus gen. n. differs from the genus Khatangia Vishniakova, 1975 in the absence of a pterostigma and an elongate areola postica in the forewing. All these differences and many others lead us to the proposal of a new genus.
The monophyly of the family Psyllipsocidae is supported by one character of the female genitalia: the spermathecal sac with complex scleritizations at the origin and usually with an accessory vesicle. Molecular analysis also supports the monophyly of the family (Yoshizawa et al. 2006). Libanopsyllipsocus alexanderasnitsyni gen. et sp. n. represents the oldest record of the Psyllipsocidae and demonstrates that this family is at least as old as the lowermost Cretaceous, if not older. Unexpectedly some features of this very old fossil are probably derived, viz., the absence of a pterostigma in the forewing and M simple in the hind wing. The discovery of new fossils belonging to this family could bring more information on the polarity and potential homoplasy of some characters in use for the classification, and increase as such our knowledge of the evolutionary history of this lineage.