Abstract

The taxonomic circumscription of the large and diverse leaf beetle genus Chrysolina Motschulsky is not clear, and its discrimination from the closely related genus Oreina Chevrolat has classically been controversial. In addition, the subgeneric arrangement of the species is unstable, and proposals segregating Chrysolina species into new genera have been recently suggested. In this context, the availability of a phylogenetic framework would provide the basis for a stable taxonomic system, but the existing phylogenies are based on few taxa and have low resolution. In the present study we perform a phylogenetic analysis based on mitochondrial (cox1 and rrnL) and nuclear (H3) DNA sequences from a sample of fifty-two Chrysolina species representing almost half of the subgeneric diversity of the group (thirty out of sixty-five subgenera) and most of the morphological, ecological and karyological variation in the genus. In addition, five Oreina species from two subgenera have also been analysed. The resulting phylogeny is used to evaluate some of the most relevant taxonomic hypotheses for Chrysolina, and also to reconstruct its ancestral host plant associations in a Bayesian framework. Our findings support the paraphyly of Chrysolina as currently defined due to the inclusion of Oreina, the monophyly of the Chrysolina (plus Oreina) species including the divergent Chrysolina (Polysticta) vigintimaculata (Clark, 1864), and enable inferences of deep-level evolutionary relationships among the studied subgenera. The plant family Lamiaceae is inferred as the ancestral host of the study group, whose evolution is characterized by continuous host-shifting among pre-existing host plant families. Some Chrysolina clades include mixtures of species with different levels of diet breadth, indicating that niche width has varied through time.

Highlights

  • The genus Chrysolina Motschulsky is a very large and diverse group of leaf-beetles that are mainly distributed in Europe, Asia and Africa (Bieńkowski 2001)

  • In this work we present the results of a phylogenetic study based on mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences from a sample of Chrysolina and Oreina species, using Bayesian and maximum likelihood (ML) inference approaches

  • Cox1 and rrnL sequences showed the well-known A+T bias typical of insect mtDNA (69.9% and 76,4%, respectively), whereas base frequency was more balanced in the nuclear histone 3 gene (H3) marker (54,8%)

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Summary

Introduction

The genus Chrysolina Motschulsky is a very large and diverse group of leaf-beetles that are mainly distributed in Europe, Asia and Africa (Bieńkowski 2001). The most recent and updated taxonomic review (Bieńkowski 2007) does not contribute a comparative morphological diagnosis to differentiate Chrysolina from the closely related genera In this sense the most controversial case is the one concerning the genera Chrysolina and Oreina Chevrolat, whose discrimination mainly relies in the ratio between the length of the metasternum and the length of the first abdominal sternite (Weise 1893). The subgeneric arrangement of the Chrysolina species is unstable (Mikhailov 2000, 2002, Bieńkowski 2001, 2007, Bourdonné 2008, 2012, Kippenberg 2010) This taxonomic instability reflects the lack of a supraspecific systematic for the genus Chrysolina, due in part to the absence of a phylogenetic background

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