Dinosaur Parasites? These Jurassic Bugs Didn't Suck Dino Blood After All, Scientists Say

Dino Blood-Suckers Were No Such Thing, Scientists Say
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By: Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience Senior Writer
Published: 02/20/2013 01:04 PM EST on LiveScience

A group of Jurassic insects thought to have been parasites of feathered dinosaurs were falsely accused, new research finds. Instead, the tiny creatures were aquatic flies, similar to some still living today.

The findings don't change the reality that dinosaurs really did have lice and other parasites, Nanjing Institute of Geology and Paleontology researcher Diying Huang and his colleagues write in the Feb. 21 issue of the journal Nature. Huang and his colleagues had previously discovered dino-fleas 10 times the size of the ones that plague mammals today.


A mating pair of strashilids, fossil insects from the Jurassic that resemble modern aquatic flies.

But insects known as the strashilids had been wrongly identified as bloodsuckers, Huang and his colleagues now conclude.

The itsy-bitsy insects, only a few millimeters long, have grasping back legs and what appeared, in fossilized specimens, to be a sucking beak. These remains made scientists think strashilids belonged to an extinct group of dinosaur parasites. But researchers had only discovered a handful of these Jurassic insects.

Now, Huang and his colleagues have examined 13 new specimens of strashilids from 165 million years ago, found in Inner Mongolia. Two of these specimens even preserve males and females having sex. [See Images of the Fossil Flies Having Sex]

The new look at these ancient insects reveals that only male strashilids had grasping back legs, an indication that these limbs were used to hang on to females during sex, not to cling to dinosaur feathers during feeding. What's more, both sexes had vestigial mouthparts, suggesting the short-lived adults didn't feed at all. The insects also had large, membranous wings.

An examination of the insects' genitalia matched them to a modern group of flies, the Nymphomyiidae. These flies have feathery wings and live along rapidly moving streams. Like the Jurassic insects, adults of the present-day flies keep some vestiges of their larval selves. The ancient flies, in particular, often hung on to their abdominal gills, an unusual feature among insects, the researchers report.

Researchers suspect that these flies probably shed their wings toward the end of their lives and returned to the water to mate as their last act. The fossils of flies engaged in the act, which reveal wingless males gripping wingless females, support that theory.

Actual dino-parasites from the Jurassic were larger than strashilids, measuring about 0.7 inches (17 millimeters) in length for species such as Pseudopulex jurassicus and Pseudopulex magnus. In one way, ancient fleas were less scary than modern versions, however — a 2012 study in the journal Nature found that Jurassic bloodsuckers probably couldn't jump.

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas or LiveScience @livescience. We're also on Facebook & Google+.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Before You Go

Feathered Dinos
Cutest Dinosaur Ever?(01 of15)
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A baby megalosauroid Sciurumimus is perched on a rock by the Bavarian Sea in Germany. (credit:Emily Willoughby)
Liaoning Scene(02 of15)
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"My favorite of my work is probably my 'Liaoning Scene' just for the sheer amount of time, work and detail I put into it," artist Emily Willoughby told The Huffington Post. But she added that the flying microraptor dinos should have been painted glossy black, according to new research. (credit:Emily Willoughby)
Leaving Tracks(03 of15)
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A bird-like dromaeosaur leaves footprints in the ground. The name Dromaeosauridae means "running lizards." (credit:Emily Willoughby)
Utah's Predator(04 of15)
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The Utahraptor ostrommaysorum is the largest known member of the Dromaeosauridae family. (credit:Emily Willoughby)
Prey Restraint(05 of15)
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Dromaeosaurids were feathered carnivores that lived in the Cretaceous Period. (credit:Emily Willoughby)
Capturing Prey(06 of15)
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The carnivorous Saurornitholestes finds its prey by digging in burrows. (credit:Emily Willoughby)
Not Always Sleeping(07 of15)
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Even though this troodontid's name "Mei long" means "sleeping dragon," the duck-sized dino is thought to have sometimes dashed through the forest. (credit:Emily Willoughby)
The Chase(08 of15)
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The colors of Anchiornis's feathers are known from fossils--and its name means "near bird." (credit:Emily Willoughby)
Near Bird(09 of15)
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Anchiornis are proposed to serve as a link between modern-day birds and non-avian dinosaurs. (credit:Emily Willoughby)
Licking The Wound(10 of15)
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The Talos sampsoni takes a rest to tend to an injured toe. (credit:Emily Willoughby)
Tree Food(11 of15)
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The Epidexipteryx hui searches for grubs to eat. (credit:Emily Willoughby)
Coming In For The Landing(12 of15)
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The Archaeopteryx was once widely considered the earliest known bird. Scientists now believe the feathered animal was a dinosaur. (credit:Emily Willoughby)
Mother And Young(13 of15)
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The bird-like Caudipteryx zoui lived in the early Cretaceous Period. (credit:Emily Willoughby)
On The Run(14 of15)
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The Sinosauropteryx prima ran through the forests of the early Cretaceous period. (credit:Emily Willoughby)
Thirsty(15 of15)
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The Sinornithosaurus millenii pauses for a drink. (credit:Emily Willoughby)