Abstract

Africa has the most tropical and subtropical land of any continent, yet has relatively low species richness in several taxa. This depauperate nature of the African tropical fauna and flora has led some to call Africa the “odd man out.” One exception to this pattern is velvet ants (Hymenoptera: Mutillidae), wingless wasps that are known for Müllerian mimicry. While North American velvet ants form one of the world’s largest mimicry complexes, mimicry in African species has not been investigated. Here we ask do African velvet ant Müllerian mimicry rings exist, and how do they compare to the North American complex. We then explore what factors might contribute to the differences in mimetic diversity between continents. To investigate this we compared the color patterns of 304 African velvet ant taxa using nonmetric multidimensional scaling (NMDS). We then investigated distributions of each distinct mimicry ring. Finally, we compared lizard diversity and ecoregion diversity on the two continents. We found that African female velvet ants form four Müllerian rings, which is half the number of North American rings. This lower mimetic diversity could be related to the relatively lower diversity of insectivorous lizard species or to the lower number of distinct ecoregions in Africa compared to North America.

Highlights

  • Africa is geographically and biologically unique among the continents, being the only landmass currently extending across both the northern and southern hemispheric subtropical ridges, (~30 ̊N & S) and as such, has the most extensive surface area of any continent lying within the tropical and subtropical zones [1]

  • While it has been observed that the tropics are generally more species rich and biologically diverse in comparison to higher latitudes (e.g., [2,3]), Africa has been termed the “Odd Man Out” by Richards [4] due to the depauperate nature of the African rainforest flora in terms of species richness compared to the other tropical regions

  • What is intriguing is that this African velvet ant mimicry complex is less phenotypically diverse than the North American mimicry complex [26,27]

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Summary

Introduction

Africa is geographically and biologically unique among the continents, being the only landmass currently extending across both the northern and southern hemispheric subtropical ridges, (~30 ̊N & S) and as such, has the most extensive surface area of any continent lying within the tropical and subtropical zones [1]. While it has been observed that the tropics are generally more species rich and biologically diverse in comparison to higher latitudes (e.g., [2,3]), Africa (excluding Madagascar) has been termed the “Odd Man Out” by Richards [4] due to the depauperate nature of the African rainforest flora in terms of species richness compared to the other tropical regions. Some clades, which are often associated with seasonally dry communities, are more species rich and/or diverse in Africa than on the other continental landmasses, including Acacieae and detarioid legumes, viperine snakes, bovids, termites, and velvet ants [17,18,19,20,21,22,23]

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