Omma is a genus of beetles in the family Ommatidae. Omma is an example of a living fossil. The oldest species known, O. liassicum, lived during the final stage of the Triassic (Rhaetian), over 200 million years ago, though the placement of this species in Omma has been questioned.[1] Numerous other fossil species are known from the Jurassic and Cretaceous of Europe and Asia. The only living species is Omma stanleyi, which is endemic to Australia. Three other extant species endemic to Australia that were formerly part of this genus were moved to the separate genus Beutelius in 2020.[2]Omma stanleyi is strongly associated with wood, being found under Eucalyptus bark and exhibiting thanatosis when disturbed. Its larval stage and many other life details are unknown due to its rarity. Males are typically 14–20 mm in length, while females are 14.4-27.5 mm. Omma stanleyi occurs throughout eastern Australia from Victoria to Central Queensland.[2]
Description
According to Li, Huang & Cai, 2021, Omma is distinguished from other ommatid beetles by the following characters:[1]
Head without prominent posterior protuberances. Labrum with dentate anterior margin. Separate mentum absent. Anterior third of gulamentum not depressed. Pronotal disc with rounded lateral edges; dorsal surface without ridges or protuberances. Sternopleural suture absent. Prosternal process short. Punctured explanate elytral epipleura absent. CuA of hind wings forked; wedge cell present. Abdominal ventrites abutting.
Holotype (A,B) and paratype (C,D) specimens of Omma liassicum dating to the Triassic-Jurassic boundary ~ 200 million years ago
Holotype specimen of Omma janetae from the Mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber of Myanmar, dating to around 100 million years ago
Specimen of Omma forte from the Mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber of Myanmar
Omma ancistrodontum(Tan, Wang, Ren & Yang, 2012) =Pareuryomma ancistrodontum (Callovian-Oxfordian), Daohugou Village, Shantou Township, Ningcheng County, Inner Mongolia, China
(?)Omma daxishanenseCai & Huang, 2017 Upper Jurassic (Oxfordian), China