Microminae | |
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Micromus africanus | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Neuroptera |
Family: | Hemerobiidae |
Subfamily: | Microminae Krueger, 1922[1] |
Microminae is a subfamily of neuropteran insects of the family Hemerobiidae.[1]
Includes the genera Micromus (with global distribution), Nusalala (with Neotropical distribution), Noius[2] (New Caledonia), and Megalomina (Australia and New Guinea).[3]
The subfamily is characterized by a single unambiguous synapomorphy, male abdominal tergites 9 and 10 fused (49:1), and two homoplasious transformations (23:1 and 37:1).[4]
Recent studies place Drepanepteryginae as the sister subfamily of Microminae, with its last common ancestor estimated to have lived between 131-141 million years ago. The same study places the last common ancestor of all Microminae somewhere in between 112 and 118 million years ago.[3]
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