Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jul 13, 2026

Timematodea

Timematodea is a small suborder of stick insects, believed to be the earliest diverging living branch of the group. It contains only one living genus, Timema, known from the western United States, as well as two fossil genera, Granosicorpes and Tumefactipes from the early Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian) aged Burmese amber of Myanmar, all three of which are assigned to the family Timematidae. Another genus, Electrotimema, from Eocene aged Baltic amber, has also been assigned to the suborder, but its precise placement is uncertain, as the diagnostic features of the tarsi were cited inconsistently, so it is unclear whether they are 5-segmented or 3-segmented. A key diagnostic character of the family Timematidae is 3-segmented tarsi, and 5-segmented tarsi would suggest Electrotimema is not a timematid.

Last revised
Jul 13, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
213 w
Citations
2
Source
Timematodea
Temporal range:
Timema californicum mating pair
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Clade: Pancrustacea
Class: Insecta
Order: Phasmatodea
Suborder: Timematodea
Kevan, 1982
Family: Timematidae
Caudell, 1903
Genera
  • ?†Electrotimema Zompro 2005
  • Granosicorpes Chen et al. 2019
  • Timema Scudder, 1895
  • Tumefactipes Chen et al. 2019

Timematodea is a small suborder of stick insects, believed to be the earliest diverging living branch of the group. It contains only one living genus, Timema, known from the western United States, as well as two fossil genera, Granosicorpes and Tumefactipes from the early Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian) aged Burmese amber of Myanmar, all three of which are assigned to the family Timematidae. Another genus, Electrotimema, from Eocene aged Baltic amber, has also been assigned to the suborder, but its precise placement is uncertain, as the diagnostic features of the tarsi were cited inconsistently, so it is unclear whether they are 5-segmented or 3-segmented.1 A key diagnostic character of the family Timematidae is 3-segmented tarsi, and 5-segmented tarsi would suggest Electrotimema is not a timematid.1

References

References

  1. Chen, Sha; Deng, Shi-Wo; Shih, Chungkun; Zhang, Wei-Wei; Zhang, Peng; Ren, Dong; Zhu, Yi-Ning; Gao, Tai-Ping (October 2019). "The earliest timematids in Burmese amber reveal diverse tarsal pads of stick insects in the mid-Cretaceous". Insect Science. 26 (5): 945–957. Bibcode:2019InsSc..26..945C. doi:10.1111/1744-7917.12601. ISSN 1672-9609. PMID 29700985. S2CID 13787599.