Hoch Hannelore, Deckert Jürgen, Wessel Andreas
Institut für Systematische Zoologie, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Museum für Naturkunde, Invalidenstrasse 43, 10115 Berlin, Germany.
Biol Lett. 2006 Jun 22;2(2):222-4. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2006.0451.
Ancient, long-extinct floras and faunas can be reassembled through fossils and phylogenetics, and even palaeo-environments can be reconstructed with the aid of palaeoclimatology. However, very little is known about the sound-scape of the past. Of what kind were the first biologically meaningful sounds and vibrations ever emitted and perceived? The earliest signals in the history of life were probably produced by arthropods making use of the mechanical properties of their exoskeleton. Here, we report an observation of vibrational signalling in the coleorrhynchan Hackeriella veitchi, a representative of a Gondwanan relict insect lineage which is still extant in the Queensland rainforest. Our finding suggests that vibrational signalling by tymbal organs is ancestral for the Hemiptera (exclusive of Sternorrhyncha)--the song of the Coleorrhyncha was a likely element of the acoustic environment in the Permian moss forests and had possibly changed little since.
通过化石和系统发育学,可以重新拼凑出古代早已灭绝的动植物群,甚至借助古气候学还能重建古环境。然而,对于过去的声音景观我们却知之甚少。有史以来最早发出并被感知到的具有生物学意义的声音和振动是什么样的?生命史上最早的信号可能是节肢动物利用其外骨骼的机械特性产生的。在此,我们报告了对鞘喙蝽科维氏哈氏蛛蝽(Hackeriella veitchi)振动信号的观察,该物种是冈瓦纳残余昆虫谱系的代表,至今仍存在于昆士兰雨林中。我们的发现表明,鼓膜器官发出的振动信号是半翅目(不包括胸喙亚目)的原始特征——鞘喙蝽科的鸣声很可能是二叠纪苔藓森林声学环境的一部分,并且自那时起可能变化不大。