Updated
Updated · SciTechDaily · May 17
LMU Researchers Identify 100-Million-Year-Old Bug With Giant Claws, Naming New Genus
Updated
Updated · SciTechDaily · May 17

LMU Researchers Identify 100-Million-Year-Old Bug With Giant Claws, Naming New Genus

2 articles · Updated · SciTechDaily · May 17
  • 100-million-year-old amber from Myanmar’s Kachin region preserved a newly identified true bug with oversized front-leg claws, which LMU researchers named Carcinonepa libererrantes.
  • Micro-CT scans and a shape analysis of more than 2,000 grasping structures showed the chelae were unlike those of other insects, marking only the fourth known independent evolution of such claws in insects.
  • The fossil was classified as a true water bug within Heteroptera, but its body resembles modern toad bugs, suggesting a terrestrial predatory lifestyle in a Cretaceous coastal forest.
  • The giant chelae likely helped it seize small insects, while the genus name references crab-like limbs and the species name nods to K-pop group Stray Kids.
What drove an ancient insect to evolve crab-like claws, a feature so rare it has only appeared four times in insect history?
This crab-bug was found with new tech. What other secrets are hiding in plain sight within our museum collections?
Beyond this K-pop tribute, what other modern celebrities have been unexpectedly immortalized as ancient species?