Bioerosion of siliceous rocks driven by rock-boring freshwater insects

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Abstract

Macrobioerosion of mineral substrates in fresh water is a little-known geological process. Two examples of rock-boring bivalve molluscs were recently described from freshwater environments. To the best of our knowledge, rock-boring freshwater insects were previously unknown. Here, we report on the discovery of insect larvae boring into submerged siltstone (aleurolite) rocks in tropical Asia. These larvae belong to a new mayfly species and perform their borings using enlarged mandibles. Their traces represent a horizontally oriented, tunnel-like macroboring with two apertures. To date, only three rock-boring animals are known to occur in fresh water globally: a mayfly, a piddock, and a shipworm. All the three species originated within primarily wood-boring clades, indicating a simplified evolutionary shift from wood to hardground substrate based on a set of morphological and anatomical preadaptations evolved in wood borers (e.g., massive larval mandibular tusks in mayflies and specific body, shell, and muscle structure in bivalves).

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Bolotov, I. N., Kondakov, A. V., Potapov, G. S., Palatov, D. M., Chan, N., Lunn, Z., … Pokrovsky, O. S. (2022). Bioerosion of siliceous rocks driven by rock-boring freshwater insects. Npj Materials Degradation, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41529-022-00216-6

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