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Evolution and Diversification Dynamics of Butterflies

Authors :
Akito Y. Kawahara
Caroline Storer
Ana Paula S. Carvalho
David M. Plotkin
Fabien Condamine
Mariana P. Braga
Emily A. Ellis
Ryan A. St Laurent
Xuankun Li
Vijay Barve
Liming Cai
Chandra Earl
Paul B. Frandsen
Hannah L. Owens
Wendy A. Valencia-Montoya
Kwaku Aduse-Poku
Emmanuel F. A. Toussaint
Kelly M. Dexter
Tenzing Doleck
Amanda Markee
Rebeccah Messcher
Y-Lan Nguyen
Jade Aster T. Badon
Hugo A. Benítez
Michael F. Braby
Perry A. C. Buenavente
Wei-Ping Chan
Steve C. Collins
Richard A. Rabideau Childers
Even Dankowicz
Rod Eastwood
Zdenek F. Fric
Riley J. Gott
Jason P. W. Hall
Winnie Hallwachs
Nate B. Hardy
Rachel L. Hawkins Sipe
Alan Heath
Jomar D. Hinolan
Nicholas T. Homziak
Yu-Feng Hsu
Yutaka Inayoshi
Micael G.A. Itliong
Daniel H. Janzen
Ian J. Kitching
Krushnamegh Kunte
Gerardo Lamas
Michael J. Landis
Elise A. Larsen
Torben B. Larsen
Jing V. Leong
Vladimir Lukhtanov
Crystal A. Maier
Jose I. Martinez
Dino J. Martins
Kiyoshi Maruyama
Sarah C. Maunsell
Nicolás Oliveira Mega
Alexander Monastyrskii
Ana B. B. Morais
Chris J. Müller
Mark Arcebal K. Naive
Gregory Nielsen
Pablo Sebastián Padrón
Djunijanti Peggie
Helena Piccoli Romanowski
Szabolcs Sáfián
Motoki Saito
Stefan Schröder
Vaughn Shirey
Doug Soltis
Pamela Soltis
Andrei Sourakov
Gerard Talavera
Roger Vila
Petr Vlasanek
Houshuai Wang
Andrew D. Warren
Keith R. Willmott
Masaya Yago
Walter Jetz
Marta A. Jarzyna
Jesse W. Breinholt
Marianne Espeland
Leslie Ries
Robert P. Guralnick
Naomi E. Pierce
David J. Lohman
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

Butterflies are a diverse and charismatic insect group that are thought to have diversified via coevolution with plants and in response to dispersals following key geological events. These hypotheses have been poorly tested at the macroevolutionary scale because a comprehensive phylogenetic framework and datasets on global distributions and larval hosts of butterflies are lacking. We sequenced 391 genes from nearly 2,000 butterfly species to construct a new, phylogenomic tree of butterflies representing 92% of all genera and aggregated global distribution records and larval host datasets. We found that butterflies likely originated in what is now the Americas, ∼100 Ma, shortly before the Cretaceous Thermal Maximum, then crossed Beringia and diversified in the Paleotropics. The ancestor of modern butterflies likely fed on Fabaceae, and most extant families were present before the K/Pg extinction. The majority of butterfly dispersals occurred from the tropics (especially the Neotropics) to temperate zones, largely supporting a “cradle” pattern of diversification. Surprisingly, host breadth changes and shifts to novel host plants had only modest impacts.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........1465b4291c26c89c5a740ade14df67a3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.05.17.491528