Origin of the insect wing and wing articulation from the arthropodan leg
- 1 July 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Zoology
- Vol. 61 (7) , 1618-1669
- https://doi.org/10.1139/z83-217
Abstract
The most primitive known pterygote terga, wing articulation, wings, and upper leg segments with exites, occur in gigantic Upper Carboniferous Paleodictyoptera, Homoiopteridae. Fossil features are used as clues for reinterpreting some structures connected with flight in modern Pterygota. Brief comparisons with Paleozoic Diaphanopterodea, Permothemistida, Ephemeroptera, Protodonata, and with living Ephemeroptera, Odonata and Neoptera are given. The wing articulation of all Pterygota is derived from a common ancestral ground plan based upon features present in fossils. The ancestral wings were articulated by a closely packed band of multiple sclerites which were hinged to 8 lateral tergal lobes, and aligned with 8 pairs of wing veins. The axillaria of Neoptera and axillary plates of Paleoptera are composite sclerites, which originated by fusion of several sclerites of the original band. Articular patterns of Paleoptera and Neoptera evolved differently and show the presence or absence of a gap at the cubital level the presence or absence of a turning-pivoting composite 3rd axillary sclerite (3Ax) and a different composition of all composite sclerites. Gliding and wing folding adaptations within the articular band are discussed. A new fossil-based interpretation of veinal stems, veinal sectors, and of their fluting near the wing base is offered. An underlying symmetry of thoracic tergal sulci, articular sclerites and wing venation seems to point to a nearly symmetrical, nonflying pro-wing engaged in up-and-down movement. Evidence of articulation in Paleozoic nymphal wings and evolution of metamorphic instars are examined. Pitfalls of paleoentomological work are discussed. Criteria for major divisions of Pterygota are reassessed. The wing possibly originated from the 1st segment (epixoca) of the euarthropodan upper leg and its exite. An epicoxal podomere became incorporated into the body wall and broke up into an articular ring of dorsal and ventral sclerites, and an epixocal exite flattened and became a pro-wing. The pro-wing originally operated on a row of pivots from the epixoca and subcoxa (pleuron) and became mobilized by epicoxal leg musculature.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Flight Interneurons in the Locust and the Origin of Insect WingsScience, 1982
- Permian Mayfly Nymphs: New Taxa and Systematic CharactersPublished by Springer Nature ,1980
- Blood Circulation in Insect WingsMemoirs of the Entomological Society of Canada, 1964
- On the Wing‐Venation of InsectsPsyche: A Journal of Entomology, 1923