The first mainland European Mesozoic click-beetle (Coleoptera: Elateridae) revealed
by X-ray micro-computed tomography scanning of an Upper Cretaceous amber from Hungary
Fossil bioinclusions in amber are invaluable source of information on the past evolution
and diversity of various organisms, as well as on the paleoecosystems in general.
The click-beetles, Elateridae, which originated and greatly diversified during the
Mesozoic, are mostly known from the adpression-like fossils, and their diversity in
the Cretaceous ambers is only poorly documented. In this study, we describe a new
click-beetle based on an incomplete inclusion in ajkaite, an Upper Cretaceous (Santonian)
amber from the Ajka Coal Formation from Hungary. We used X-ray micro-computed tomography
scanning to reconstruct its morphology because it is deposited in an opaque piece
of amber. Our results suggest that the newly described Ajkaelater merkli
gen. et sp. nov. belongs to subfamily Elaterinae. It represents the first Mesozoic
beetle reported from Hungary, and the first Mesozoic Elateridae formally described
from mainland Europe. Our discovery supports an Eurasian distribution and diversification
of Elaterinae already in the Cretaceous. The paleoenvironment of the Ajka Coal Formation
agrees well with the presumed habitat preference of the new fossil taxon. The discovery
of a presumably saproxylic click-beetle shed further light on the yet poorly known
paleoecosystem of the Santonian present-day western Hungary.