The chief model for modern yellowjacket mimics are social wasps united into the Vespidae family. In our time these wasps are as really common as everyone knows who has ever seen them stuck in his or her jam. However, judging by the fossil record, vespid wasps were rare and represented by exclusively solitary taxa in the Early Cretaceous. So probably Buccinatormyia gangnami mimicked something else, or, alternatively, vespid wasps radiated early than currently thought. Buccinatormyia gangnami belongs to Zhangsolvidae, a dipteran family which prospered during the Early Cretaceous, but then went extinct due to unknown causes. “There were several lineages of long-proboscid flies during the Mesozoic, and all they were initially associated with gymnosperms. Some managed to survive into our time, while others disappeared, probably due to their inability to adapt themselves to angiosperm-dominated worlds. Why zhangsolvids were destined to lose, we cannot explain yet,” said Alexander Khramov, the study’s leading author and a senior researcher at the Borissiak Paleontological Institute (Moscow). Reference: “First long-proboscid flies (Diptera: Zhangsolvidae) from the Lower Cretaceous of South Korea” by Alexander V. Khramov, Gi-Soo Nam and Dmitry V. Vasilenko, 12 December 2019, Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology.DOI: 10.1080/03115518.2019.1664634