Abstract

A phylogenetic morphological analysis of the genus Ogyges Kaup, distributed in Nuclear Central America, from Chiapas, Mexico, to northwestern Nicaragua was undertaken. Five species of Proculejus Kaup, distributed north of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec in Mexico, were selected as outgroup. Ogyges was recovered as monophyletic with three species groups: championi, laevissimus, and crassulus. Each species group shows a distinct, generally allopatric distribution. The O. championi species group, with ten species, is distributed in the Maya block, more specifically in the mountainous system north of the Motozintla-Comaltitlán fault in Chiapas, and north of the dry valleys of the Cuilco and Motagua rivers in Guatemala. The two remaining species groups are distributed in the Chortis block. The O. laevissimus species group, including seven species, ranges mostly along the Pacific Volcanic Chain from Guatemala to El Salvador, and from southeastern Honduras to the northwestern area of Nicaragua. The O. crassulus species group, with ten species, is distributed from northeastern Guatemala (Merendón) to northern Honduras. The Isthmus of Tehuantepec in Mexico, the Motagua-Cuilco and Motozintla-Comaltitlán sutures zones in Chiapas and Guatemala, the lowland valleys of Colón and Comalí rivers between Nicaragua and Honduras (or, perhaps, the northern suture of the Siuna Terrane in Nicaragua), the Guayape fault system in Honduras, and the intricate dry valleys of Ulúa-Chamelecón-Olancho in Honduras, are hypothesized to have acted as barriers that affected the geographical distribution of Ogyges, as well as probably other montane organisms.

Highlights

  • Nuclear Central America (Schuchert 1935), the mountainous region comprising Chiapas (Mexico), Guatemala, Belize, El Salvador, Honduras, and northern Nicaragua, is characterized by several large and high mountain and volcanic ranges reaching an elevation of 4222 m, separated by deep and dry valleys, with the consequent isolation and independent evolution of populations

  • The O. laevissimus species group, with seven species, is supported by three nonsynapomorphic character states: antennal club very wide [character 17(2)] and concave in dorsal view [character 18(1)]; and body large (35–46 mm) [character 52(1)]. These three states were resolved as parallelisms in the subclade O. tzutuhili + O. marilucasae of the O. championi species group

  • A clearly marked frontoclypeal suture appeared only once in a terminal species of the O. crassulus species group, suggesting that the character is homoplastic in Passalidae

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Nuclear Central America (Schuchert 1935), the mountainous region comprising Chiapas (Mexico), Guatemala, Belize, El Salvador, Honduras, and northern Nicaragua, is characterized by several large and high mountain and volcanic ranges reaching an elevation of 4222 m, separated by deep and dry valleys, with the consequent isolation and independent evolution of populations. All gigantic (50–80 mm) and with many autapomorphies, distributed in Nuclear Central America from the Chimalapas region, Oaxaca (Delgado and MoraAguilar 2014), to northern Honduras, being probably distributed in the Chocó area in Colombia (Schuster et al 2003). Proculejus is found in Mexico north of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec (Reyes-Castillo 1970, Boucher 2006), it includes at least 10 species and is rather similar to Ogyges, except for the presence of a frontoclypeal suture and a different form of suprainternal mandibular tooth. Based on the resulting cladogram, we conducted a biogeographical analysis to describe the areas of distribution and possible barriers, applying the results of the analysis of the biogeography of Nuclear Central America in an evolutionary framework

Methods
Results
Discussion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call