Generic Phylogeny of North American Depressariinae (Lepidoptera: Elachistidae) and Hypotheses About Coevolution

Authors: Berenbaum, May R.; Passoa, Steven

Source: Annals of the Entomological Society of America, Volume 92, Number 6, November 1999 , pp. 971-986(16)

Publisher: Entomological Society of America

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Abstract:

Although a considerable amount of ecological information is known about interactions between Depressaria species and their apiaceous/asteraceous host plants, this information has lacked a phylogenetic context; such a context is important in understanding the evolutionary history and phylogenetic trajectory of plant/insect interactions in general. Accordingly, we undertook an examination of the generic phylogeny of North American Depressariinae, using morphological characters of the larvae, pupae, and adults. Two different parsimony analyses yielded the same tree topology, with a consistency index over 88 and retention index between 90 and 91. This tree provided no evidence of congruent cladogenesis in this group. Host shifts between unrelated host plant families, particularly reversions to ancestral host plant groups, are abundant. Association with plants in Apiaceae and Asteraceae has apparently led to rapid speciation; the two most species-rich taxa, Depressaria Haworth and Agonopterix Hübner, are dominated by species that feed on these families. Because Agonopterix and Depressaria are not sister groups, the Apiaceae must have been colonized independently at least twice by Depressariinae. The best explanation for the pattern of host association seen for genera of depressariine elachistids is that of sequential colonization of related plant groups. This finding is consistent with other findings to date—that congruent cladogenesis is a phenomenon most likely to occur within genera, not at the family or subfamily level

Keywords: Depressariinae; Elachistidae; phylogeny; insect-plant interactions; coevolution

Document Type: Research article

Publication date: 1999-11-01

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  • Annals of the Entomological Society of America is published in January, March, May, July, September, and November. Annals especially invites submission of manuscripts that integrate different areas of insect biology, and address issues that are likely to be of broad relevance to entomologists. Articles also report on basic aspects of the biology of arthropods, divided into categories by subject matter: systematics; ecology and population biology; arthropod biology; arthropods in relation to plant diseases; conservation biology and biodiversity; physiology, biochemistry, and toxicology; morphology, histology, and fine structure; genetics; and behavior.
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