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Featured researches published by Charles Lienhard.


Current Biology | 2014

Female Penis, Male Vagina, and Their Correlated Evolution in a Cave Insect

Kazunori Yoshizawa; Rodrigo Lopes Ferreira; Yoshitaka Kamimura; Charles Lienhard

Sex-specific elaborations are common in animals and have attracted the attention of many biologists, including Darwin [1]. It is accepted that sexual selection promotes the evolution of sex-specific elaborations. Due to the faster replenishment rate of gametes, males generally have higher potential reproductive and optimal mating rates than females. Therefore, sexual selection acts strongly on males [2], leading to the rapid evolution and diversification of male genitalia [3]. Male genitalia are sometimes used as devices for coercive holding of females as a result of sexual conflict over mating [4, 5]. In contrast, female genitalia are usually simple. Here we report the reversal of intromittent organs in the insect genus Neotrogla (Psocodea: Prionoglarididae) from Brazilian caves. Females have a highly elaborate, penis-like structure, the gynosome, while males lack an intromittent organ. The gynosome has species-specific elaborations, such as numerous spines that fit species-specific pouches in the simple male genital chamber. During prolonged copulation (~40-70 hr), a large and potentially nutritious ejaculate is transferred from the male via the gynosome. The correlated genital evolution in Neotrogla is probably driven by reversed sexual selection with females competing for seminal gifts. Nothing similar is known among sex-role reversed animals.


Zootaxa | 2016

Bridging the gap between chewing and sucking in the hemipteroid insects : new insights from Cretaceous amber

Kazunori Yoshizawa; Charles Lienhard

The diversity of feeding apparatuses in insects far exceeds that observed in any other animal group. Consequently, tracking mouthpart innovation in insects is one of the keys toward understanding their diversification. In hemipteroid insects (clade Paraneoptera or Acercaria: lice, thrips, aphids, cicadas, bugs, etc.), the transition from chewing to piercing-and-sucking mouthparts is widely regarded as the turning point that enabled hyperdiversification of the Hemiptera, the fifth largest insect order. However, the transitional process from chewing to piercing-and-sucking in the Paraneoptera was hitherto completely unknown. In this paper, we report a well preserved mid Cretaceous amber fossil of the paraneopteran insect family Archipsyllidae and describe it as Mydiognathus eviohlhoffae gen. et sp. n. This species has elongate mandibles and styliform laciniae similar to Hemiptera but retains functional chewing mouthparts. A number of morphological characters place the Archipsyllidae as the sister group of the thrips plus hemipterans, which strongly suggests that the mouthparts of M. eviohlhoffae represent a transitional condition from primitive chewing to derived piercing-and-sucking mouthparts. The clade composed of Archipsyllidae, thrips, and hemipterans is here named Pancondylognatha, a new supra-ordinal taxon. Based on newly obtained information, we also assess the monophyly of the Paraneoptera, which was called into question by recent phylogenomic analyses. A phylogenetic analysis that includes Mydiognathus strongly supports the monophyly of the Paraneoptera.


Zootaxa | 2014

Trichadenotecnum species from Peninsular Malaysia and Singapore (Insecta: Psocodea: 'Psocoptera': Psocidae)

Kazunori Yoshizawa; Charles Lienhard; Idris Abd Ghani

Species of the bark louse genus Trichadenotecnum Enderlein (Insecta: Psocodea) from Peninsular Malaysia and Singapore are revised with illustrations and identification keys. Twenty species are here recognised, with four new species and ten recorded for the first time from this region, together with an unnamed species represented by a single female. The previously described species T. marginatum New & Thornton is not included because its generic assignment is questionable. Females of T. cinnamonum Endang & New, T. imrum New & Thornton and T. sibolangitense Endang, Thornton & New, and the male of T. kerinciense Endang & New are described for the first time. A new species group is defined for T. krucilense Endang, Thornton & New.


Italian Journal of Zoology | 2012

The external morphology of females, males and eggs of a Liposcelis silvarum (Insecta: Psocodea: Liposcelididae) strain with unusually developed compound eyes, visualised with scanning electron microscopy

Zuzana Kučerová; Zhi-Hong Li; Irma Kalinović; Qian-Qian Yang; Jiřina Hromádková; Charles Lienhard

Abstract The unusually developed eyes of a Liposcelis silvarum strain from Croatia were discovered using scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Such a morphologically unique type of eye was previously unknown in the genus Liposcelis. The typical morphological characteristics of females and males, important for species diagnosis, were also described and visualised using SEM micrographs. This paper includes details of male genitalia and egg morphology not previously published for L. silvarum. Species status of this geographic strain is discussed.


Zootaxa | 2015

Synonymy of Cryptopsocus Li with Trichadenotecnum Enderlein (Insecta: Psocodea: 'Psocoptera': Psocidae) and description of three new species

Kazunori Yoshizawa; Charles Lienhard

The genus Cryptopsocus Li, 2002 is synonymized with Trichadenotecnum Enderlein, 1909. The type species of Crypto-psocus, T. cynostigmus (Li, 2002) n. comb., is considered to be a close relative of T. marginatum New & Thornton, 1976. These species cannot be assigned to any species group previously established in Trichadenotecnum so that the marginatum species group is here proposed for them. Three new species belonging to this species group are described: T. tigrinum and T. sharkeyi from Thailand and T. sabahense from Sabah, Malaysia. The phylogenetic position of the marginatum group is discussed using morphological data.


Zootaxa | 2015

Psocids from Malta (Insecta: Psocodea: 'Psocoptera'), with new synonymy for Peripsocus stagnivagus based on the discovery of its first Palaearctic male.

Charles Lienhard; David Mifsud

About 2,000 specimens of Psocoptera were collected in Malta recently. Examination of this material revealed 21 new records for the Maltese archipelago, augmenting the known psocid fauna of these islands from 6 to 27 species. One of the most abundant species is Peripsocus stagnivagus Chapman, 1930 (= P. bivari Baz, 1988 = P. leleupi Badonnel, 1976, new synonymies), formerly considered to be a predominantly Nearctic species. The discovery in Malta, of one male of this usually parthenogenetic species enabled comparison of this first Palaearctic male with the well-documented, rare Nearctic male. The lack of any morphological difference between these males, or between females from the Nearctic, the western Palaearctic and several Atlantic islands, supports the proposed synonymies.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Microcrystals coating the wing membranes of a living insect (Psocoptera: Psyllipsocidae) from a Brazilian cave

Charles Lienhard; Rodrigo L. Ferreira; Edwin Gnos; John Hollier; Urs Eggenberger; André Piuz

Two specimens of Psyllipsocus yucatan with black wings were found with normal individuals of this species on guano piles produced by the common vampire bat Desmodus rotundus. These specimens have both pairs of wings dorsally and ventrally covered by a black crystalline layer. They did not exhibit any signs of reduced vitality in the field and their morphology is completely normal. This ultrathin (1.5 µm) crystalline layer, naturally deposited on a biological membrane, is documented by photographs, SEM micrographs, energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) and X-ray diffractometry (XRD). The crystalline deposit contains iron, carbon and oxygen, but the mineral species could not be identified. Guano probably played a role in its formation; the presence of iron may be a consequence of the excretion of iron by the common vampire bat. This enigmatic phenomenon lacks obvious biological significance but may inspire bionic applications. Nothing similar has ever been observed in terrestrial arthropods.


Archive | 2016

Three new psocids (Insecta, Psocodea, ‘Psocoptera’) for the Maltese fauna

Charles Lienhard; David Mifsud

Psocids, commonly known as booklice or barklice, have a worldwide distribution (Lienhard & SmitherS, 2002) with about 5,700 described species (Zhang, 2011). They usually live on vegetation, especially on the bark and foliage of trees and shrubs, where they feed on epiphytic microflora (algae, fungi and lichen), organic detritus and pollen; some species are regularly found in ground litter, under stones, in caves or in birds’ nests, mammals’ nests or human dwellings (Lienhard, 1998). Recently, the psocid fauna of the Maltese Islands was studied in some detail and 27 species were reported from this archipelago (Lienhard & mifSud, 2015). Further collections revealed the presence of three additional species, information on which follows hereunder.


Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society | 2006

Molecular systematics of the suborder Trogiomorpha (Insecta: Psocodea: 'Psocoptera')

Kazunori Yoshizawa; Charles Lienhard; Kevin P. Johnson


Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny | 2010

In search of the sister group of the true lice : A systematic review of booklice and their relatives, with an updated checklist of Liposcelididae (Insecta: Psocodea)

Kazunori Yoshizawa; Charles Lienhard

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Rodrigo Lopes Ferreira

Universidade Federal de Lavras

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Zuzana Kučerová

Research Institute of Crop Production

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Irma Kalinović

Josip Juraj Strossmayer University of Osijek

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Edwin Gnos

American Museum of Natural History

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Muhammad Yasin

University of Agriculture

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Waqas Wakil

University of Agriculture

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