Lin Yu-Chi, Lin Rung-Juen, Braby Michael F, Hsu Yu-Feng
Department of Life Science National Taiwan Normal University Taipei Taiwan.
Division of Ecology and Evolution Research School of Biology The Australian National University Acton ACT Australia.
Ecol Evol. 2019 Aug 5;9(17):9827-9840. doi: 10.1002/ece3.5524. eCollection 2019 Sep.
Larvae of the cosmopolitan family Limacodidae, commonly known as "slug" caterpillars, are well known because of the widespread occurrence of spines with urticating properties, a morpho-chemical adaptive trait that has been demonstrated to protect the larvae from natural enemies. However, while most species are armed with rows of spines ("nettle" caterpillars), slug caterpillars are morphologically diverse with some species lacking spines and thus are nonstinging. It has been demonstrated that the evolution of spines in slug caterpillars may have a single origin and that this trait is possibly derived from nonstinging slug caterpillars, but these conclusions were based on limited sampling of mainly New World taxa; thus, the evolution of spines and other traits within the family remains unresolved. Here, we analyze morphological variation in slug caterpillars within an evolutionary framework to determine character evolution of spines with samples from Asia, Australia, North America, and South America. The phylogeny of the Limacodidae was reconstructed based on a multigene dataset comprising five molecular markers (5.6 Kbp: COI, 28S, 18S, EF-1α, and wingless) representing 45 species from 40 genera and eight outgroups. Based on this phylogeny, we infer that limacodids evolved from a common ancestor in which the larval type possessed spines, and then slug caterpillars without spines evolved independently multiple times in different continents. While larvae with spines are well adapted to avoiding generalist predators, our results imply that larvae without spines may be suited to different ecological niches. Systematic relationships of our dataset indicate six major lineages, several of which have not previously been identified.
刺蛾科是一种分布于世界各地的蛾类,其幼虫通常被称为“蛞蝓毛虫”,因身上广泛分布着具有螫刺特性的刺而广为人知,这是一种形态化学适应性特征,已被证明可保护幼虫免受天敌侵害。然而,虽然大多数种类的幼虫身上长有一排排的刺(“荨麻毛虫”),但蛞蝓毛虫在形态上具有多样性,有些种类没有刺,因此不会蜇人。研究表明,蛞蝓毛虫身上刺的进化可能有单一的起源,并且这一特征可能源自无刺的蛞蝓毛虫,但这些结论是基于对主要来自新大陆类群的有限采样得出的;因此,该科内部刺及其他特征的进化仍未得到解决。在这里,我们在一个进化框架内分析蛞蝓毛虫的形态变异,以利用来自亚洲、澳大利亚、北美洲和南美洲的样本确定刺的性状进化。基于包含五个分子标记(5.6千碱基对:细胞色素氧化酶亚基I、28S核糖体RNA、18S核糖体RNA、延伸因子-1α和无翅基因)的多基因数据集,重建了刺蛾科的系统发育树,该数据集代表了40个属的45个物种以及8个外类群。基于这一系统发育树,我们推断刺蛾科是从一个幼虫类型有刺的共同祖先进化而来,然后无刺的蛞蝓毛虫在不同大陆独立进化了多次。虽然有刺的幼虫很适应躲避一般的捕食者,但我们的结果表明无刺的幼虫可能适合不同的生态位。我们数据集的系统发育关系表明有六个主要谱系,其中几个此前尚未被识别。