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Cited by 21 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Our cladistic analyses based on wing character states recovered the high‐level relationships within the Cercopoidea as follows: Sinoalidae + (Procercopidae + (Cercopionidae + modern cercopoids)) (Figures and ). Sinoalidae, recently reported in Middle–Late Jurassic deposits in northeastern China and mid‐Cretaceous Burmese amber (Chen et al, , , , ; Chen, Wang, Zhang, et al, ; Chen, Wang, Zheng, Jarzembowski, et al, ; Chen, Zhang, Wang, Jiang, Jiang, et al, ; Fu, Cai, & Huang, ; Fu & Huang, , ; Wang et al, ), shares some plesiomorphic characters with ancient Clypeata and bears some remarkably specialized traits. This family occupies the most basal position as the sister clade to all other Cercopoidea in our phylogenetic reconstruction, indicating that the family likely represents a primitive cercopoid lineage.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…Our cladistic analyses based on wing character states recovered the high‐level relationships within the Cercopoidea as follows: Sinoalidae + (Procercopidae + (Cercopionidae + modern cercopoids)) (Figures and ). Sinoalidae, recently reported in Middle–Late Jurassic deposits in northeastern China and mid‐Cretaceous Burmese amber (Chen et al, , , , ; Chen, Wang, Zhang, et al, ; Chen, Wang, Zheng, Jarzembowski, et al, ; Chen, Zhang, Wang, Jiang, Jiang, et al, ; Fu, Cai, & Huang, ; Fu & Huang, , ; Wang et al, ), shares some plesiomorphic characters with ancient Clypeata and bears some remarkably specialized traits. This family occupies the most basal position as the sister clade to all other Cercopoidea in our phylogenetic reconstruction, indicating that the family likely represents a primitive cercopoid lineage.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Burmese amber (Chen et al, 2017(Chen et al, , 2019a(Chen et al, , 2019bChen, Wang, Zheng, Jarzembowski, et al, 2019;Fu, Cai, & Huang, 2017;Fu & Huang, 2018, 2019Wang et al, 2012) Figure 8), the two main lineages of Cercopoidea (Sinoalidae and Procercopidae) likely originated and radiated in the Late Triassic after their common ancestor split with Cicadoidea (Cryan, 2005;Shcherbakov & Popov, 2002;Wang et al, 2012).…”
Section: Late Jurassic Deposits In Northeastern China and Mid-cretaceousmentioning
confidence: 99%