Late Paleozoic insects from the Konservat-Lagerstatte Mangrullo formation, Paraná basin, Uruguay
Fecha
2022-11Autor
Calisto, V.
Piñeiro, Gervacio
Lara, María Belén
Metadatos
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The South American Paleozoic entomofauna is largely diverse, including a rather great number of
previously described taxa. However, at the present day, if we compare with the North Hemisphere
record and the Triassic entomofauna, the quantitative data available is scarce. More than 35 species
have been collected and described as originated from distinct Late Paleozoic sequences: Bajo de Veliz
Formation (Upper Carboniferous-Lower Permian, Paganzo Basin, San Luis Province) and Rio Genoa
Formation (Lower Permian, Tepuel Genoa Basin, Chubut Province), Argentina; Mangrullo Formation
(Upper Carboniferous-Lower Permian, Parana Basin), Uruguay; Iratí/Serra Alta formations (Lower
Permian, Paraná Basin, State do Rio Grande do Sul and Sáo Paulo), Río do Rasto Formation (Middle Upper Permian, Paraná Basin, Sáo Paulo State), upper section ?Taciba Formation (Lower Permian),
and uppermost Campo Mouráo Formation (Upper Carboniferous-Lower Permian), Itararé Group of
the Paraná Basin, Brazil. As mentioned above, in Uruguay, the insects come from the Mangrullo
Formation, an ancient Konservat-Lagerstátte of Late Paleozoic age (probably Gzhelian-Asselian), at
the Estancia "El Barón" locality, Cerro Largo Department. Until now, three insect species have been
formally described, Paracicadopsis mendezalzolai (Hemiptera: Cycadopsyllidae), Perlapsocus formosoi
(Perlaria: Perlapsocidae), and Barona arcuata (Blattodea: Incertae sedis). However, other insects have
been recently collected from the Mangrullo outcrops and currently are under study: blattids, beetles (?
Permocupedidae), glosselytrodeans (Jurinidae), permopsocidans (Psocidiidae), and mecopterans
(Permochoristidae). The fossils are housed in the paleontological collection at the Departamento de
Paleontología of Facultad de Ciencias-Universidad de la República (UdelaR), Montevideo, Uruguay,
under acronym FC-DPI. The insects are represented mainly by isolated forewing impressions and
referred mainly to terrestrial and phytophagous groups. The Mangrullo Formation includes a
moderately diverse entomofauna similar to Carboniferous-Permian entomofauna from Brazil,
Argentina, Russia, France, USA, and China evidencing the influence of the Pangea supercontinent
during this time. The Mangrullo insects were recorded in association with mesosaurian skeletons,
plants (e.g., left cuticles, stems and reproductive organs, permineralized and probably silicified tree ferns), and pygocephalomorph crustaceans. This community developed in areas at the Mangrullo
Lagoon with seasonally colder and arid climate alternating with warmed temperatures and humid
climatic conditions typical of the Late Carboniferous-Early Permian times.
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