Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Phylogenomics of darkling beetles (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae) from the Atacama Desert
View through CrossRef
Background
Tenebrionidae (Insecta: Coleoptera) are a conspicuous component of desert fauna worldwide. In these ecosystems, they are significantly responsible for nutrient cycling and show remarkable morphological and physiological adaptations. Nevertheless, Tenebrionidae colonizing individual deserts have repeatedly emerged from different lineages. The goal of our study was to gain insights into the phylogenetic relationships of the tenebrionid genera from the Atacama Desert and how these taxa are related to the globally distributed Tenebrionidae.
Methods
We used newly generated transcriptome data (47 tribes, 7 of 11 subfamilies) that allowed for a comprehensive phylogenomic analysis of the tenebrionid fauna of this hyperarid desert and fills a gap in our knowledge of the highly diversified Tenebrionidae. We examined two independent data sets known to be suitable for phylogenomic reconstructions. One is based on 35 neuropeptide precursors, the other on 1,742 orthologous genes shared among Coleoptera.
Results
The majority of Atacama genera are placed into three groups, two of which belong to typical South American lineages within the Pimeliinae. While the data support the monophyly of the Physogasterini, Nycteliini and Scotobiini, this does not hold for the Atacama genera of Edrotini, Epitragini, Evaniosomini, Praociini, Stenosini, Thinobatini, and Trilobocarini. A suggested very close relationship of
Psammetichus
with the Mediterranean
Leptoderis
also could not be confirmed. We also provide hints regarding the phylogenetic relationships of the Caenocrypticini, which occur both in South America and southern Africa. Apart from the focus on the Tenebrionidae from the Atacama Desert, we found a striking synapomorphy grouping Alleculinae, Blaptinae, Diaperinae, Stenochinae, and several taxa of Tenebrioninae, but not
Tenebrio
and
Tribolium
. This character, an insertion in the
myosuppressin
gene, defines a higher-level monophyletic group within the Tenebrionidae.
Conclusion
Transcriptome data allow a comprehensive phylogenomic analysis of the tenebrionid fauna of the Atacama Desert, which represents one of the seven major endemic tribal areas in the world for Tenebrionidae. Most Atacama genera could be placed in three lineages typical of South America; monophyly is not supported for several tribes based on molecular data, suggesting that a detailed systematic revision of several groups is necessary.
Title: Phylogenomics of darkling beetles (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae) from the Atacama Desert
Description:
Background
Tenebrionidae (Insecta: Coleoptera) are a conspicuous component of desert fauna worldwide.
In these ecosystems, they are significantly responsible for nutrient cycling and show remarkable morphological and physiological adaptations.
Nevertheless, Tenebrionidae colonizing individual deserts have repeatedly emerged from different lineages.
The goal of our study was to gain insights into the phylogenetic relationships of the tenebrionid genera from the Atacama Desert and how these taxa are related to the globally distributed Tenebrionidae.
Methods
We used newly generated transcriptome data (47 tribes, 7 of 11 subfamilies) that allowed for a comprehensive phylogenomic analysis of the tenebrionid fauna of this hyperarid desert and fills a gap in our knowledge of the highly diversified Tenebrionidae.
We examined two independent data sets known to be suitable for phylogenomic reconstructions.
One is based on 35 neuropeptide precursors, the other on 1,742 orthologous genes shared among Coleoptera.
Results
The majority of Atacama genera are placed into three groups, two of which belong to typical South American lineages within the Pimeliinae.
While the data support the monophyly of the Physogasterini, Nycteliini and Scotobiini, this does not hold for the Atacama genera of Edrotini, Epitragini, Evaniosomini, Praociini, Stenosini, Thinobatini, and Trilobocarini.
A suggested very close relationship of
Psammetichus
with the Mediterranean
Leptoderis
also could not be confirmed.
We also provide hints regarding the phylogenetic relationships of the Caenocrypticini, which occur both in South America and southern Africa.
Apart from the focus on the Tenebrionidae from the Atacama Desert, we found a striking synapomorphy grouping Alleculinae, Blaptinae, Diaperinae, Stenochinae, and several taxa of Tenebrioninae, but not
Tenebrio
and
Tribolium
.
This character, an insertion in the
myosuppressin
gene, defines a higher-level monophyletic group within the Tenebrionidae.
Conclusion
Transcriptome data allow a comprehensive phylogenomic analysis of the tenebrionid fauna of the Atacama Desert, which represents one of the seven major endemic tribal areas in the world for Tenebrionidae.
Most Atacama genera could be placed in three lineages typical of South America; monophyly is not supported for several tribes based on molecular data, suggesting that a detailed systematic revision of several groups is necessary.
Related Results
Territorial Defense: Aggressive Behavior in Beetles
Territorial Defense: Aggressive Behavior in Beetles
Territoriality, referring to the defense of a designated area, is one of the common animal behaviors observed in many insect species. In insects, territorial behavior contributes t...
THE EFFECT OF THE FUNGI CERATOCYSTIS MINOR (HEDGECOCK) HUNT, CERATOCYSTIS MINOR (HEDGECOCK) HUNT VAR. BARRASII TAYLOR, AND SJB 122 ON REPRODUCTION OF THE SOUTHERN PINE BEETLE, DENDROCTONUS FRONTALIS ZIMMERMANN (COLEOPTERA: SCOLYTIDAE)
THE EFFECT OF THE FUNGI CERATOCYSTIS MINOR (HEDGECOCK) HUNT, CERATOCYSTIS MINOR (HEDGECOCK) HUNT VAR. BARRASII TAYLOR, AND SJB 122 ON REPRODUCTION OF THE SOUTHERN PINE BEETLE, DENDROCTONUS FRONTALIS ZIMMERMANN (COLEOPTERA: SCOLYTIDAE)
AbstractThe southern pine beetle, Dendroctonus frontalis Zimmermann, was studied in the laboratory to determine the influence of associated fungi on its reproduction. First-generat...
Miocene to recent precipitation history of the central Atacama Desert as reconstructed from a clay pan record in the Coastal Cordillera, northern Chile. 
Miocene to recent precipitation history of the central Atacama Desert as reconstructed from a clay pan record in the Coastal Cordillera, northern Chile. 
Hyperaridity is the major limiting factor of Earth-surface processes and biological activity in the Atacama Desert of northern Chile, one of the oldest and driest deserts on Earth....
Quaternary alluvial fan evolution in the western Atacama Desert, North Chile
Quaternary alluvial fan evolution in the western Atacama Desert, North Chile
The Atacama Desert is considered the driest and oldest non-polar desert on Earth featuring numerous indications for an Early Miocene onset of its hyperaridity. Despite vast evidenc...
Spatial dynamics of predation by carabid beetles on slugs
Spatial dynamics of predation by carabid beetles on slugs
Summary 1. An explicitly spatial sampling approach was employed to test the null hypothesis that the predation on slugs by the carabid beetle Pterostichus melanarius (Illiger) was ...
Nonlethal sampling of DNA from critically endangered diving beetles (Coleoptera: Dytiscidae) using a single antenna
Nonlethal sampling of DNA from critically endangered diving beetles (Coleoptera: Dytiscidae) using a single antenna
AbstractNonlethal DNA sampling is highly desirable in molecular genetic studies of protected and endangered species. To develop a demonstrably nonlethal method of obtaining DNA fro...
Past Climates of Atacama Desert
Past Climates of Atacama Desert
The Atacama is the driest warm desert on the planet yet the geological evidence indicate it was far more humid in the past. Factors such as Humboldt ocean current and orogenic effe...
Significance of millennial-scale coastal upwelling and Rio Loa variability forAtacama paleoclimate during MIS 2
Significance of millennial-scale coastal upwelling and Rio Loa variability forAtacama paleoclimate during MIS 2
The Atacama Desert located in northern Chile is one of the driest places on earth. The factors determining recent hyperarid climate conditions and their interplay and variability o...

