Amber fossils suggest male mosquitoes were once bloodsuckers
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Amber fossils suggest male mosquitoes were once bloodsuckers
An image from Azar et al., Current Biology 2023 shows a microscope image of a male mosquito, preserved in amber from Lebanon, dating to the early Cretaceous period. (Azar et al., Current Biology 2023 via The New York Times)

by Kate Golembiewski



NEW YORK, NY.- Every single mosquito that’s ever bitten you has been female. For them, a meal of blood is the ultimate girl dinner. Only females have mouth parts capable of piercing skin. But insects found trapped in amber, described in a study published Monday in the journal Current Biology, suggest that male mosquitoes may have once drunk blood, too.

When small animals or plants get stuck in gooey tree resin, they can be preserved if the resin hardens into amber. “In Lebanon, I have found some 450 different outcrops of amber, which is a lot for a small country,” said Dany Azar, a paleontologist at the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology and Lebanese University, and an author of the paper.

Lebanese amber is rich in preserved fossils, called inclusions, and dates to around 125 million years in the early Cretaceous Period. In addition to being the age of the dinosaurs, it was also a time when flowering plants were becoming more widespread. Azar says he studies inclusions with the aim of understanding how flowering plants and pollinator insects have evolved together.

He collected the amber specimens in this study about 15 years ago in central Lebanon, but he thought they belonged to a group of insects that he didn’t focus on, so Azar didn’t prioritize them for study. But while polishing one of the specimens to a thin slice that could be examined under a microscope, he was taken aback.

“To my big surprise, I said, ‘Oh, gosh, this is a mosquito,’” Azar said.

His co-author and former doctoral adviser, André Nel of the National Museum of Natural History in Paris, confirmed that two of Azar’s amber specimens appeared to be the oldest known fossils from the mosquito family, with sharp, elongated mouth parts covered in tiny toothlike bristles. Further examination of the insects yielded another surprise.

“I said, ‘André, I didn’t drink anything, but I’m seeing something bizarre here — these are males,’” Azar said.

The insects had pincerlike organs called claspers on their abdomens, which are used to hold onto females during mating. The presence of these claspers meant that Azar and Nel had stumbled upon a seeming impossibility: male mosquitoes with mouth parts made for bloodsucking.

Modern male mosquitoes live off nectar and plant juices. (Most of the time, so do females: They only drink blood when they need extra protein to produce their eggs.) It’s long been thought by scientists that mosquitoes and their biting fly cousins evolved from plant-eating ancestors, and that females later evolved to have the ability to drink blood.

“We think now that, originally, the mosquito could be bloodsucking,” Azar said. “With the appearance of the flowering plant, this function could be just forgotten later on during the evolution of these insects.”

The idea that these ancient male mosquitoes fed on blood was “interesting and fascinating and controversial,” said Dale Greenwalt, a paleobiologist at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History.

After all, feeding on blood is a riskier strategy than sipping nectar because it comes with the threat of being swatted — one reason modern female mosquitoes only feed on blood when they need it for reproduction. It’s also possible that the insects in this study will turn out to be something other than mosquitoes or that perhaps their bristly mouth parts, while different from those of modern males, were not used for drinking blood.

Greenwalt said that with their hypothesis, Azar and Nel “have stepped out on some very thin ice” but that their bold claim could wind up pushing scientific research forward.

“Some scientists are very conservative. Some scientists are not,” Greenwalt said. “The good thing about that is that if those who are not turn out to be wrong, those who are will eventually correct the error. And we’ll just have to wait and see.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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