Abstract

The grasshopper family Catantopidae is a well-known group, whose members include some of the most notorious agricultural pests. The existing classifications of the family are mostly utilitarian rather than being based on phylogenetic analysis and therefore unable to provide the stability desired for such an economically important group. In the present study, we present the first comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of the family based on morphology. By extensively sampling from the Chinese fauna, we included in the present analysis multiple representatives of each of the previously recognized tribes in the family. In total, we examined 94 genera represented by 240 species and evaluated 116 characters, including 84 for external morphology and 32 for male genitalia. The final matrix consists of 86 ingroup taxa and 88 characters. Our phylogenetic analyses resulted in a high resolution of the basal relationships of the family while showed considerable uncertainty about the relationships among some crown taxa. We further evaluated the usefulness of morphological characters in phylogeny reconstruction of the catantopids by examining character fit to the shortest trees found, and contrary to previous suggestions, our results suggest that genitalia characters are not as informative as external morphology in inferring higher-level relationship. We further suggest that earlier classification systems of grasshoppers in general and Catantopidae in particular most probably consist of many groups that are not natural due the heavy reliance on genitalia features and need to be revised in the light of future phylogenetic studies. Finally, we outlined a tentative classification scheme based on the results of our phylogenetic analysis.

Highlights

  • Catantopidae (Acridoidea, Orthoptera) is a well-known grasshopper family; its members include some of the most notorious pests in agriculture, including Schistocerca gregaria (Forsköl), Oxya spp, and Melanoplus spp (Hill 1987)

  • We examined a total of 116 characters, including 84 characters of external morphology and 32 characters of male genitalia morphology

  • Character fit on the shortest trees, as expressed by the consistency index (CI) and retention index (RI), was lower for characters of male genitalia morphology in comparison to characters of external morphology (Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Catantopidae (Acridoidea, Orthoptera) is a well-known grasshopper family; its members include some of the most notorious pests in agriculture, including Schistocerca gregaria (Forsköl), Oxya spp, and Melanoplus spp (Hill 1987). Among the various classification systems or schemes of acridoids (Dirsh 1961, 1975, Harz 1975, Otte 1981, Yin 1982, Xia 1994, Li and Xia 2002) and several other classifications proposed for the Catantopidae (Tinkham 1940, Mistshenko 1952, Harz 1975), there exist a great deal of disagreement concerning the classification within the family (Table 1), which cannot be settled because of the lack of phylogenetic studies. Otte (1981, 1984) adopted a compromised version of the various systems in his monographic treatment of North American grasshoppers. These classifications, different, have one thing in common: all are entirely based on overall similarity and make little, if any, reference to phylogenetic relationship

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