Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology Lund University Lund Sweden
2. Department of Biochemistry and Laboratory of Biotechnology V. I. Vernadsky Crimean Federal University Simferopol Crimea
3. Sammlungs‐ und Forschungszentrum der Tiroler Landesmuseen Ferdinandeum Hall in Tirol Austria
4. Department of Ecological and Biological Science Università degli Studi della Tuscia Viterbo Italy
5. Finnish Museum of Natural History University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland
6. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Connecticut Storrs Connecticut USA
7. Biological Museum, Department of Biology Lund University Lund Sweden
Abstract
AbstractZygaenidae, also known as burnet, forester, smoky, or leaf skeletonizer moths, are a family of mainly diurnal moths well known for their aposematic colouration and the ability to release hydrogen cyanide as a defence mechanism. So far, few attempts have been made to understand the evolutionary history of the global zygaenid fauna. Here, we inferred the most comprehensive molecular phylogeny for Zygaenidae to date and estimated the lineage timing‐of‐divergence with a Bayesian approach. Building on earlier work, we significantly increased the taxon and gene sampling for the family, which here included data from 30 gene fragments, recovered from public databases or newly sequenced, for almost 30% of the species representing 92 genera (49%) and all five subfamilies. We recovered strong support for the monophyly of Zygaenidae, Chalcosiinae, and Zygaeninae. Procridinae were recovered as monophyletic with low support, whereas the monophyly of Callizygaeninae remains untested as we sampled only one of the two genera. In the core dataset, we recovered Procridinae as sister to Callizygaeninae + Chalcosiinae. This large clade is the sister lineage to Zygaeninae. The position of Inouelinae could not be resolved. The lineage leading to the extant Zygaenidae appears to have diverged in Late Cretaceous (ca. 86 Ma), while the divergence among the subfamilies occurred several million years before the Cretaceous–Paleogene mass extinction event (ca. 66 Ma). Additionally, we provide a review of known fossil Zygaenidae as Appendix S1. Our results form a strong basis for future studies of zygaenid biosystematics, including their ecology, evolution, and behaviour.
Funder
Crafoordska Stiftelsen
National Science Foundation
Grantová Agentura České Republiky
Genome Canada