Authors
Akito Y Kawahara, David Plotkin, Marianne Espeland, Karen Meusemann, Emmanuel FA Toussaint, Alexander Donath, France Gimnich, Paul B Frandsen, Andreas Zwick, Mario Dos Reis, Jesse R Barber, Ralph S Peters, Shanlin Liu, Xin Zhou, Christoph Mayer, Lars Podsiadlowski, Caroline Storer, Jayne E Yack, Bernhard Misof, Jesse W Breinholt
Publication date
2019/11/5
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
116
Issue
45
Pages
22657-22663
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Butterflies and moths (Lepidoptera) are one of the major superradiations of insects, comprising nearly 160,000 described extant species. As herbivores, pollinators, and prey, Lepidoptera play a fundamental role in almost every terrestrial ecosystem. Lepidoptera are also indicators of environmental change and serve as models for research on mimicry and genetics. They have been central to the development of coevolutionary hypotheses, such as butterflies with flowering plants and moths’ evolutionary arms race with echolocating bats. However, these hypotheses have not been rigorously tested, because a robust lepidopteran phylogeny and timing of evolutionary novelties are lacking. To address these issues, we inferred a comprehensive phylogeny of Lepidoptera, using the largest dataset assembled for the order (2,098 orthologous protein-coding genes from transcriptomes of 186 species, representing nearly all …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AY Kawahara, D Plotkin, M Espeland, K Meusemann… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2019