A comprehensive molecular phylogeny of Geometridae (Lepidoptera) with a focus on enigmatic small subfamilies
Author
Murillo-Ramos, Leidys
Author
Brehm, Gunnar
Author
Sihvonen, Pasi
Author
Hausmann, Axel
Author
Holm, Sille
Author
Ghanavi, Hamid Reza
Author
Õunap, Erki
Author
Truuverk, Andro
Author
Staude, Hermann
Author
Friedrich, Egbert
Author
Tammaru, Toomas
Author
Wahlberg, Niklas
text
PeerJ
2019
2019-08-27
7
1
39
journal article
10.7717/peerj.7386
41ff7b58-5204-42ec-b85a-75a6904af370
PMC6716565
31523494
5767530
Desmobathrinae Meyrick, 1886
Taxa placed in
Desmobathrinae
were formerly recognized as
Oenochrominae
genera with slender appendages.
Holloway (1996)
revived
Desmobathrinae
from synonymy with
Oenochrominae
and divided it into the tribes
Eumeleini
and
Desmobathrini
.
Desmobathrinae
species have a pantropical distribution and they apparently (still) lack recognized morphological apomorphies (
Holloway, 1996
). Our phylogenetic analysis has questioned the monophyly of
Desmobathrinae
sensu
Holloway
because some species currently placed in
Oenochrominae
were embedded within the group (see also
Sihvonen
et al., 2011
), and also the phylogenetic position of the tribe
Eumeleini
is unstable (see below).
Desmobathrinae
can be regarded as a monophyletic group after the transfer of
Zanclopteryx
,
Nearcha
and
Racasta
from
Oenochrominae
to
Desmobathrinae
, and the removal of
Eumeleini
(
Table 2
).
Desmobathrinae
as circumscribed here are an independent lineage that is sister to all
Geometridae
except
Sterrhinae
,
Larentiinae
and
Archiearinae
.
The monobasic
Eumeleini
has had a dynamic taxonomic history:
Eumelea
was transferred from
Oenochrominae
s.l
. to
Desmobathrinae
based on the pupal cremaster (
Holloway, 1996
), whereas
Beljaev (2008)
pointed out that
Eumelea
could be a member of
Geometrinae
based on the skeleto-muscular structure of the male genitalia. Molecular studies (
Sihvonen
et al., 2011
,
Ban et al., 2018
) suggested that
Eumelea
was part of
Oenochrominae
s.str
., but these findings were not well-supported and no formal taxonomic changes were proposed. Our analyses with IQTREE and RAxML recovered
Eumeleini
in two very different positions, either as sister to
Geometrinae
(SH-like = 93.6, UFBoot2 = 71) (
Figs. 4
and
5
), or as sister of
Plutodes
in
Ennominae
(RBS = 60) (Data S3). The examination of morphological details suggests that the position as sister to
Geometrinae
is more plausible: hindwing vein M2 is present and tubular; anal margin of the hindwing is elongated; and large coremata originate from the saccus (
Holloway, 1994
, our observations). The morphology of
Eumelea
is partly unusual, and for that reason we illustrate selected structures (Data S4), which include for instance the following: antennae and legs of both sexes are very long; forewing vein Sc (homology unclear) reaches wing margin; in male genitalia coremata are extremely large and branched; uncus is crossshaped (cruciform); tegumen is narrow and it extends ventrally beyond the point of articulation with vinculum; saccus arms are extremely long, looped; and vesica is with lateral rows of cornuti. However, the green geoverdin pigment concentration of
Eumelea
is low in comparison to
Geometrinae
(
Cook et al., 1994
). We tentatively conclude that
Eumelea
is probably indeed associated with
Geometrinae
. However, since eleven genetic markers were not sufficient to clarify the phylogenetic affinities of
Eumelea
, we provisionally place the genus as
incertae sedis
(
Table 2
).