TY - JOUR
T1 - Evolution and losses of spines in slug caterpillars (Lepidoptera: Limacodidae)
AU - Lin, Yu Chi
AU - Lin, Rung Juen
AU - Braby, Michael F.
AU - Hsu, Yu Feng
N1 - Funding Information:
We appreciate David Wagner's and an anonymous reviewer for their careful review and insightful suggestions. We thank Shou-Hsien Li, Wei-Jen Chen, Shen-Horn Yen, Si-Min Lin, Ren-Chung Cheng, and Yi-Shuo Liang for helpful comments and technical discussions. We thank David Rentz, Oliverio Velástegui, Chang-Chin Chen, Chia-Lung Huang, Tomotaka Doi, Fukashi Isiwata, Yu-Tang Wang, Wei-Ting Liu, and all students in or graduated from Yu-Feng Hsu's laboratory of NTNU for helping us to collect limacodid samples. We also thank Derek Smith (Australian Museum), Susan Wright (Queensland Museum), Chunsheng Wu (Institute of Zoology Chinese Academy of Science), You Ning Su (Australian National Insect Collection), and Jing-Fu Tsai (National Museum of Natural Science) for access to collections under their care or for helping with the identification of samples. This study was supported by grants provided by Yangmingshan National Park Headquarters (1050721) and Taroko National Park Headquarters (1079007).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2019/9/1
Y1 - 2019/9/1
N2 - 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.
AB - 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.
KW - Zygaenoidea
KW - character evolution
KW - molecular phylogeny
KW - morpho-chemical defense
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U2 - 10.1002/ece3.5524
DO - 10.1002/ece3.5524
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85070706775
SN - 2045-7758
VL - 9
SP - 9827
EP - 9840
JO - Ecology and Evolution
JF - Ecology and Evolution
IS - 17
ER -