Project 5188: I. J. Garzón-Orduña, K. L. Silva-Brandão, K. Willmott, A. V. Freitas, N. Wahlberg, A. V. Brower. 2024. Wing pattern diversity in Eunica butterflies (Nymphalidae: Biblidinae): phylogenetic analysis implies decoupled adaptive trends in dorsal sexual dimorphism and ventral eyespot evolution. Cladistics. 40 (1):1-20.
Specimen: Eunica sydonia (unvouchered)
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Abstract

Butterfly eyespots are wing patterns reminiscent of vertebrate eyes, formed by concentric rings of contrastingly coloured scales. Eyespots are usually located close to the wing margin and often regarded as the single most conspicuous pattern element of butterfly wing colour displays. Recent efforts to understand the processes involved in the formation of eyespots have been driven mainly by evo-devo approaches focused on model species. However, patterns of change implied by phylogenetic relationships can also inform hypotheses about the underlying developmental mechanisms associated with the formation or disappearance of eyespots, and the limits of phenotypic diversity occurring in nature. Here we present a combined evidence phylogenetic hypothesis for the genus Eunica, a prominent member of diverse Neotropical butterfly communities, that features notable variation among species in eyespot patterns on the ventral hind wing surface. The data matrix consists of one mitochondrial gene region (COI), four nuclear gene regions (GAPDH, RPS5, EF1a and Wingless) and 68 morphological characters. A combined cladistic analysis with all the characters concatenated produced a single most parsimonious tree that, although fully resolved, includes many nodes with modest branch support. The phylogenetic hypothesis presented corroborates a previously proposed morphological trend leading to the loss of eyespots, together with an increase in the size of the conserved eyespots, relative to outgroup taxa. Furthermore, wing colour pattern dimorphism and the presence of androconia suggest that the most remarkable instances of sexual dimorphism are present in the species of Eunica with the most derived eyespot patterns, and are in most cases accompanied by autapomorphic combinations of scent scales and “hair pencils”. We discuss natural and sexual selection as potential adaptive explanations for dorsal and ventral wing patterns.


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Article DOI: 10.1111/cla.12556

Project DOI: 10.7934/P5188, http://dx.doi.org/10.7934/P5188
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MorphoBank Project 5188
  • Creation Date:
    02 April 2024
  • Publication Date:
    02 April 2024
  • Project views: 319

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    Authors' Institutions

    • National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution

    • Lund University

    • Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico (UNAM)

    • University of Florida

    • American Museum of Natural History

    • Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP)

    • USDA APHIS National Identification Service

    • Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad (INABIO), Ecuador

    • Museum of Nature Hamburg - Zoology (LIB)



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