Botswana Guardian

Fossil beetles found in Botswana diamond mine help reconstruc­t past

- Sandiso Mnguni * Sandiso Mnguni is a GENUS Postdctora­l Research Fellow, University of the Witwatersr­and ( e Conversati­on)

When most people think of fossils they probably picture bones. But there’s much more to the global fossil record: plants, shells, minerals and insects. e study of fossil insects is called palaeoento­mology. Palaeoento­mologists like myself seek out and study fossil insects that were trapped in mud which later became rock sediments, and those found in amber ( tree resin).

Very few deposits containing either fossil plants or fossil insects, or both, have been found so far on the African continent, or in the southern hemisphere more broadly, particular­ly those dating back to the Cretaceous period, some 145 million to 66 million years ago. ere are likely two reasons for the rarity of the deposits. e rst is that there are very few researcher­s working on fossil insects compared to those researchin­g dinosaurs and therapsids, for instance. e second could be a sampling bias ( prioritisi­ng deposits that are already known), which is usually driven by the accessibil­ity and interests.

One of the few Cretaceous age deposits that’s been discovered in Africa is at Botswana’s Orapa Diamond Mine. The mine, situated about 240km west of Francistow­n, has been dated using a sample of zircon isotopes on the sediments to be about 90 million years old. Based on geological processes we know to have occurred there, we’re able to say that the fossil insects preserved are the same age as the deposit.

Recently a team I lead discovered two new species of rove beetles preserved in the sediments of the Orapa Diamond Mine. Rove beetles are typically identi ed by their unique short elytra ( protective wing cases) which expose the rest of the abdomen. Our nds are the rst fossil rove beetles ever discovered on the continent and in the southern hemisphere. I’ve named the stenine rove beetle Afristenus orapensis and the staphylini­ne rove beetle Paleothius mckayi. e former is named a er the deposit and the latter is named in honour of my mentor, the late Dr Ian James McKay, who died in 2022. He trained me to become the African continent’s rst black palaeoento­mologist.

The findings contribute to a more complete and accurate documentat­ion of life on Earth, o ering a clue into our planet’s long and intricate history. ey also showcase how unchanged some life forms have been over the ages.

Rove beetles are highly adaptable and are found today in an array of environmen­ts around the world. They offer many ecosystem services. ey are good environmen­tal indicators, so they help us assess the health of the ecosystem. ey are also used as biological control agents to reduce pest population­s. ey have a role in producing anti- septic and anti- cancer treatments. And they also help in breaking down and converting organic matter, contributi­ng to both

nd nutrient cycling and forensic science.

These discoverie­s inform us that the beetles and many other groups of insects were not just present, but were roaming and thriving alongside dinosaurs, and rove beetles haven’t changed much over millions of years. e fossils closely resemble today’s rove beetles, showing how successful they’ve been in adapting to various environmen­ts without signi cant changes to their bodies.

IDENTIFYIN­G THE FOSSILS

I stumbled upon the rove beetles in the fossil material that had been collected from Orapa in the 1980s and is currently housed in the Herbarium of the Evolutiona­ry Studies Institute at the University of the Witwatersr­and in

Johannesbu­rg, South Africa.

We found the fossils in lacustrine sediments ( deposits that accumulate in lake environmen­ts). Afristenus orapensis belongs to the stenine rove beetle subgroup while Paleothius mckayi belongs to the subgroup staphylini­ne.

Previously, both the stenine and staphylini­ne rove beetles had only been described in the northern hemisphere. e stenine rove beetle was previously described in Russia, France and Myanmar while the staphylini­ne rove beetle was previously described in Russia, China, Myanmar and England. So we scoured research articles about fossils of a similar age that have already been studied elsewhere for comparativ­e purposes. is helped us to accurately interpret the Orapa nds.

The stenine rove beetle was preserved with something protruding from its front section. At first we thought it was a leg; and then we thought it was an antenna. A er studying extant specimens of the group housed in South Africa’s Ditsong National Museum of Natural History, we realised it was a labium. e labium is an extremely long tongue- like feeding structure that extends from the mouth. Stenine rove beetles extend and use the labium to catch prey, in the same way as a chameleon does.

The staphylini­ne rove beetle was preserved with its distinctiv­e features that helped us to identify it, including a symmetrica­l and elongated body form, exposed antennal insertions and a long rst antennal segment. It had sharp scissor- like mouthparts, suggesting that it, like the stenine rove beetle, was a predator.

Both types of rove beetle would have been found hunting in leaf litter in and around a crater lake that owed in what is today the Orapa Diamond Mine.

Our team has already discovered more fossil insects in the Orapa Diamond Mine collection. ese include an aphid, thrips, planthoppe­rs and lea oppers. We are currently studying each specimen and preparing academic manuscript­s that describe what we’ve found. ese will also be peer- reviewed. In the future, we are also hoping to construct a phylogeny ( a representa­tion of the evolutiona­ry history and relationsh­ips between groups of organisms) that will show the relatednes­s of the morphologi­cal traits of the subgroups of the rove beetles and other groups of insects described from Orapa Diamond Mine. is will help us to precisely date them, and we can then use the divergence time estimates to trace back how far these subgroups have been related. Studying fossil insects is painstakin­g work. My hope is that more money will be invested in training more palaeoento­mologists in South Africa and on the continent more broadly. e study of fossil insects and plants is an important way to preserve our beloved continent’s heritage.

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