Genomic analysis of the tribe Emesidini (Lepidoptera: Riodinidae)
Author
Zhang, Jing
Author
Shen, Jinhui
Author
Cong, Qian
Author
Grishin, Nick V.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-09-12
4668
4
475
488
journal article
25469
10.11646/zootaxa.4668.4.2
75f2f9b8-eb81-4a9b-9651-7400fac607aa
1175-5326
PMC8958898
31716605
3449862
211AFB6A-8C0A-4AB2-8CF6-981E12C24934
Befrostiini
Grishin, trib. n.
http://zoobank.org/
CF47B25D-F1FA-4166-BF72-88E6EE29576F
Type
genus:
Befrostia
Grishin.
Diagnosis.
A tribe without obvious phylogenetic affinities within subfamily
Riodininae
. Distinguished from other
Riodinidae
by body white below and bases of wings overscaled with white, hindwing in particular, also along anal margin. Hindwing of females almost square, with small lobule at vein M
3
. Male genitalia characterized by disproportionally large aedeagus with one long cornutus, uncus broad, pointed, not concave in ventral view, valva short and rounded, no transtilla, saccus not shorter than valva. In DNA, a combination of the following base pairs is diagnostic: nuclear genome: cne2576.1.37:A2012G, cne792.13.4:A310G, cne4106.6.1:G277C, cne3195.1.6:T355A, cne
2174.2.11
:A93G, cne306.12.2:G89T, cne3772.18.1:C271A, cne26635.1.11:A509C, cne
1086.2.12
:G82G (not A), cne23980.1.3:G59G (not A), cne4786.7.1:C158C (not A); COI barcode region: G38A, A44T, C83C (not T), T169A, A274T, A322T, C340T, A379T, T400A, T412A, T547A, and A586T.
Genera included:
Only the
type
genus.
Parent taxon:
Subfamily
Riodininae Grote, 1895
.
Selecting specimen for the genomic analysis, we attempted to sequence as many
Emesis
species as we could find. More, some of these were represented by their primary type specimens. Analysis of primary types enables us to put our taxonomic analysis on solid footing. We find that the
syntype
of
Emesis vimena
Schaus, 1928
from
Guatemala
is tightly grouped with
Emesis brimo
Godman & Salvin, 1889
(e.g. only 0.6% difference in COI barcodes) and is better viewed as a more northern subspecies of this species.
Emesis tristis
Stichel, 1929
considered a synonym of
E. vimena
, should instead be a synonym of
Emesis lupina
Godman & Salvin
, [1886]. Sequencing of primary type specimens of
Emesis adelpha
Le Cerf, 1958
and
Emesis heteroclita
Stichel, 1929
suggests their conspecificity. However, due to wing pattern differences and differences in their distributions, we view
E. adelpha
and its subspecies
E. a. vicaria
Le Cerf, 1958 as subspecies of
E. heteroclita
, rather than its synonyms.
Conversely, we find that some taxa placed as subspecies differ markedly from their nominal subspecies and should be considered distinct as the species level (new status):
Emesis furor
A. Butler & H. Druce, 1872
(not a subspecies of
E. mandana
(Cramer, 1780)
: not sister taxa, COI barcodes difference of about 2%),
Emesis melancholica
Stichel, 1916
(not a subspecies of
E. lupina
Godman & Salvin, 1886
: not in the same clade, COI barcodes 9% different), and
Emesis progne
(Godman, 1903)
(not a subspecies of
E. brimo
Godman & Salvin, 1889
: COI barcodes 3.8% different). Furthermore,
Emesis opaca
Stichel, 1910
is not a synonym of
E. lucinda
(Cramer, 1775)
(COI barcodes difference nearly 5%), but a valid species, new status. This change further reveals that
Emesis castigata diringeri
Gallard 2008
is not a subspecies of
E. castigata
Stichel, 1910
(COI barcodes difference about 3%), and due to genomic (
Fig. 2
, COI barcodes are 100% identical) and morphological similarities we suggest it to be a subjective junior synonym of
E. opaca
,
new status
. Both taxa are from
French Guiana
. We summarize our results as the following taxonomic list.
Taxonomic arrangement of the tribe
Emesidini
.
The list of species arranged into genera and subgenera resulting from our genomic analysis augmented with morphological considerations is given below. Synonymic names are included for genera and subgenera. Names treated as synonyms (genera and names of
type
species that are considered to be synonyms) are preceded by “=”: not followed by daggers are subjective junior synonyms; † objective junior synonyms; ‡ unavailable names (such as homonyms and nomina nuda); “preocc.” indicates preoccupied, the taxonomic order (insects) of the senior name is shown in brackets. Synonyms are attributed to subgenera.
Type
species (TS) for genera and subgenera are listed. For
type
species that are considered to be synonyms, valid names are shown in parenthesis. For valid genera and subgenera (not their synonyms), names of the
type
species or names which
type
species are considered to be synonyms of, are underlined in the list. The
type
of change is explained after the name (new status, new combination, new placement), and the former status or the genus of former placement is listed. Subspecies names are not listed (except those resulting from the status change in this work) pending further studies.