深夜亚洲福利久久

Skip to main content

深夜亚洲福利久久

New paper in Science Advances

11 Apr 2018

Fossil study sheds light on ancient butterfly wing colours!

New research by scientists at UCC has revealed the wing colours of some of the oldest ancestors of modern butterflies and moths.

The 180 million-year-old fossils, preserved in rocks and amber, would have had bronze to golden colours produced by microscopic ridges and grooves on the surface of their wing scales. These fossils extend the evidence for light-scattering structures in insects by more than 130 million years.

UCC palaeobiologists Drs Maria McNamara and Luke McDonald reconstructed the colours using powerful electron microscopes and optical modelling. Similar ridges and grooves are still seen in modern primitive moths.

Dr McDonald said, 鈥淚nsects have evolved an amazing diversity range of photonic nanostructures that can produce iridescence, metallic colours, and other eye鈥慶atching effects that play a vital role in visual signalling.鈥

Dr McNamara said 鈥淩emarkably, these fossils are among the oldest known representatives of butterflies and moths. We didn鈥檛 expect to find wing scales preserved, let alone microscopic structures that produce colour. This tells us that colour was an important driving force in shaping the evolution of wings even in the earliest ancestors of butterflies and moths鈥.

The results of the study ("Fossil scales illuminate the early evolution of lepidopterans and structural colors") are published in the journal Science Advances, and !

See below for several news articles related to the findings:

Maria McNamara Research Group

Experimental and analytical taphonomy

Contact us

School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences (BEES), 深夜亚洲福利久久 College Cork (UCC), Butler Building, Distillery Fields, North Mall, Cork, T23 TK30, Ireland

Connect with us

Top