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Assessing the taxonomic status of Osmoderma cristinae (Coleoptera : Scarabaeidae), endemic to Sicily, by genetic, morphological and pheromonal analyses

Zauli, Agnese ; Carpaneto, Giuseppe M. ; Chiari, Stefano ; Mancini, Emiliano ; Nyabuga, Franklin N. LU ; Redolfi De Zan, Lara ; Romiti, Federico ; Sabbani, Sunil ; Audisio, Paolo A. and Hedenström, Erik , et al. (2016) In Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research 54(3). p.506-514
Abstract

Resolving complexes of closely related and cryptic insect species can be challenging, especially when dealing with rare and protected taxa that are difficult to collect for genetic and morphological analyses. Until recently, populations of the genus Osmoderma (Scarabaeidae), widespread in Europe, were treated as a single species O. eremita (Scopoli, 1763) in spite of observed geographic variation in morphology. A previous survey using sequence data from the mtDNA cytochrome C oxidase I gene (COI) revealed the occurrence of at least two distinct lineages within this species complex: O. eremita in the west and O. barnabita Motschulsky, 1845, in the east. Interestingly, beetles confined to Sicily have been described as a distinct species,... (More)

Resolving complexes of closely related and cryptic insect species can be challenging, especially when dealing with rare and protected taxa that are difficult to collect for genetic and morphological analyses. Until recently, populations of the genus Osmoderma (Scarabaeidae), widespread in Europe, were treated as a single species O. eremita (Scopoli, 1763) in spite of observed geographic variation in morphology. A previous survey using sequence data from the mtDNA cytochrome C oxidase I gene (COI) revealed the occurrence of at least two distinct lineages within this species complex: O. eremita in the west and O. barnabita Motschulsky, 1845, in the east. Interestingly, beetles confined to Sicily have been described as a distinct species, O. cristinae Sparacio, 1994, based on morphological traits. Only few Sicilian specimens were included in the former genetic analysis, and the results led to a still questionable taxonomic rank for these populations. To explore the robustness of the previous taxonomic arrangement for O. cristinae, a combination of genetic, morphological and pheromonal analyses was used. A 617-bp fragment of the COI gene, aligned with O. cristinae and O. eremita sequences already available in GenBank, showed a clear genetic divergence between the two species (interspecific mean distance = 6.6%). Moreover, results from AFLP markers sustained the distinction of the two species. In addition, geometric morphometric analyses of the shape of male genitalia revealed a clear differentiation between the two species. Via scent analysis and field trapping, we demonstrated the production of the sex pheromone (R)-(+)-γ-decalactone by males of O. cristinae, the attraction by conspecific individuals (mostly females) to this compound, and a lack of antagonistic effect of (S)-(-)-γ-decalactone. The fact that O. eremita and O. eremita use the same compound for mate finding suggests that this sex pheromone has not undergone a differentiation and probably the allopatry of these two species compensates for the absence of a mechanism to avoid cross-attraction. Our genetic and morphological data support the divergence of the two species and confirm the species status for O. cristinae, while sex pheromones are confirmed to be invariant among different species of the genus Osmoderma.

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Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Amplified fragment length polymorphism, C oxidase I gene, Enantiomeric specificity, Geometric morphometrics, Saproxylic beetles
in
Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research
volume
54
issue
3
pages
506 - 514
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • wos:000379536800007
  • scopus:84958682374
ISSN
0947-5745
DOI
10.1111/jzs.12127
project
The PheroBio project (Pheromone monitoring of Biodiversity)
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
4d1ca0fa-1ac6-4846-8bc4-9ecb2acced65
date added to LUP
2016-04-13 14:55:41
date last changed
2024-04-04 18:16:20
@article{4d1ca0fa-1ac6-4846-8bc4-9ecb2acced65,
  abstract     = {{<p>Resolving complexes of closely related and cryptic insect species can be challenging, especially when dealing with rare and protected taxa that are difficult to collect for genetic and morphological analyses. Until recently, populations of the genus Osmoderma (Scarabaeidae), widespread in Europe, were treated as a single species O. eremita (Scopoli, 1763) in spite of observed geographic variation in morphology. A previous survey using sequence data from the mtDNA cytochrome C oxidase I gene (COI) revealed the occurrence of at least two distinct lineages within this species complex: O. eremita in the west and O. barnabita Motschulsky, 1845, in the east. Interestingly, beetles confined to Sicily have been described as a distinct species, O. cristinae Sparacio, 1994, based on morphological traits. Only few Sicilian specimens were included in the former genetic analysis, and the results led to a still questionable taxonomic rank for these populations. To explore the robustness of the previous taxonomic arrangement for O. cristinae, a combination of genetic, morphological and pheromonal analyses was used. A 617-bp fragment of the COI gene, aligned with O. cristinae and O. eremita sequences already available in GenBank, showed a clear genetic divergence between the two species (interspecific mean distance = 6.6%). Moreover, results from AFLP markers sustained the distinction of the two species. In addition, geometric morphometric analyses of the shape of male genitalia revealed a clear differentiation between the two species. Via scent analysis and field trapping, we demonstrated the production of the sex pheromone (R)-(+)-γ-decalactone by males of O. cristinae, the attraction by conspecific individuals (mostly females) to this compound, and a lack of antagonistic effect of (S)-(-)-γ-decalactone. The fact that O. eremita and O. eremita use the same compound for mate finding suggests that this sex pheromone has not undergone a differentiation and probably the allopatry of these two species compensates for the absence of a mechanism to avoid cross-attraction. Our genetic and morphological data support the divergence of the two species and confirm the species status for O. cristinae, while sex pheromones are confirmed to be invariant among different species of the genus Osmoderma.</p>}},
  author       = {{Zauli, Agnese and Carpaneto, Giuseppe M. and Chiari, Stefano and Mancini, Emiliano and Nyabuga, Franklin N. and Redolfi De Zan, Lara and Romiti, Federico and Sabbani, Sunil and Audisio, Paolo A. and Hedenström, Erik and Bologna, Marco A. and Svensson, Glenn P.}},
  issn         = {{0947-5745}},
  keywords     = {{Amplified fragment length polymorphism; C oxidase I gene; Enantiomeric specificity; Geometric morphometrics; Saproxylic beetles}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{3}},
  pages        = {{506--514}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research}},
  title        = {{Assessing the taxonomic status of Osmoderma cristinae (Coleoptera : Scarabaeidae), endemic to Sicily, by genetic, morphological and pheromonal analyses}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jzs.12127}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/jzs.12127}},
  volume       = {{54}},
  year         = {{2016}},
}