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Insect taxonomy can be difficult : A noctuid moth (Agaristinae: Aletopus imperialis) and a geometrid moth (Sterrhinae: Cartaletis dargei) combined into a cryptic species complex in eastern Africa (Lepidoptera)

Sihvonen, Pasi ; Murillo-Ramos, Leidys LU orcid ; Wahlberg, Niklas LU ; Hausmann, Axel ; Zilli, Alberto ; Ochse, Michael and Staude, Hermann S. (2021) In PeerJ 9.
Abstract

The systematic position of a large and strikingly coloured reddish-black moth, Cartaletis dargei Herbulot, 2003 (Geometridae: Sterrhinae) from Tanzania, has remained questionable since its description. Here we present molecular and morphological evidence showing that Cartaletis dargei only superficially resembles true Cartaletis Warren, 1894 (the relative name currently considered a junior synonym of Aletis Hübner, 1820), which are unpalatable diurnal moths superficially resembling butterflies, and that it is misplaced in the family Geometridae. We transfer it to Noctuidae: Agaristinae, and combine it with the genus Aletopus Jordan, 1926, from Tanzania, as Aletopus dargei (Herbulot, 2003) (new combination). We revise the genus Aletopus... (More)

The systematic position of a large and strikingly coloured reddish-black moth, Cartaletis dargei Herbulot, 2003 (Geometridae: Sterrhinae) from Tanzania, has remained questionable since its description. Here we present molecular and morphological evidence showing that Cartaletis dargei only superficially resembles true Cartaletis Warren, 1894 (the relative name currently considered a junior synonym of Aletis Hübner, 1820), which are unpalatable diurnal moths superficially resembling butterflies, and that it is misplaced in the family Geometridae. We transfer it to Noctuidae: Agaristinae, and combine it with the genus Aletopus Jordan, 1926, from Tanzania, as Aletopus dargei (Herbulot, 2003) (new combination). We revise the genus Aletopus to contain three species, but find that it is a cryptic species complex that needs to be revised with more extensive taxon sampling. Our results demonstrate the difficulties in interpreting and classifying biological diversity. We discuss the problems in species delimitation and the potential drivers of evolution in eastern Africa that led to phenotypic similarity in unrelated lepidopteran lineages.

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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Agaristinae, Biodiversity, Cryptic species, Geometridae, Molecular, Morphology, Noctuidae, Sterrhinae, Systematics, Tanzania
in
PeerJ
volume
9
article number
e11613
publisher
PeerJ
external identifiers
  • scopus:85108844593
  • pmid:34277147
ISSN
2167-8359
DOI
10.7717/peerj.11613
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
26791334-6755-4f14-a605-391b01fc9b97
date added to LUP
2021-08-17 14:33:24
date last changed
2024-06-15 14:33:38
@article{26791334-6755-4f14-a605-391b01fc9b97,
  abstract     = {{<p>The systematic position of a large and strikingly coloured reddish-black moth, Cartaletis dargei Herbulot, 2003 (Geometridae: Sterrhinae) from Tanzania, has remained questionable since its description. Here we present molecular and morphological evidence showing that Cartaletis dargei only superficially resembles true Cartaletis Warren, 1894 (the relative name currently considered a junior synonym of Aletis Hübner, 1820), which are unpalatable diurnal moths superficially resembling butterflies, and that it is misplaced in the family Geometridae. We transfer it to Noctuidae: Agaristinae, and combine it with the genus Aletopus Jordan, 1926, from Tanzania, as Aletopus dargei (Herbulot, 2003) (new combination). We revise the genus Aletopus to contain three species, but find that it is a cryptic species complex that needs to be revised with more extensive taxon sampling. Our results demonstrate the difficulties in interpreting and classifying biological diversity. We discuss the problems in species delimitation and the potential drivers of evolution in eastern Africa that led to phenotypic similarity in unrelated lepidopteran lineages.</p>}},
  author       = {{Sihvonen, Pasi and Murillo-Ramos, Leidys and Wahlberg, Niklas and Hausmann, Axel and Zilli, Alberto and Ochse, Michael and Staude, Hermann S.}},
  issn         = {{2167-8359}},
  keywords     = {{Agaristinae; Biodiversity; Cryptic species; Geometridae; Molecular; Morphology; Noctuidae; Sterrhinae; Systematics; Tanzania}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{PeerJ}},
  series       = {{PeerJ}},
  title        = {{Insect taxonomy can be difficult : A noctuid moth (Agaristinae: Aletopus imperialis) and a geometrid moth (Sterrhinae: Cartaletis dargei) combined into a cryptic species complex in eastern Africa (Lepidoptera)}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.11613}},
  doi          = {{10.7717/peerj.11613}},
  volume       = {{9}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}