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Alone on an island : The reassessment of an enigmatic species of Handmaiden Moth (Lepidoptera, Erebidae) endemic to Mauritius

Przybyłowicz, Łukasz ; Wiorek, Marcin ; Przystałkowska, Anna and Wahlberg, Niklas LU (2021) In Zoologica Scripta 50(6). p.752-768
Abstract

Maculonaclia florida (de Joannis, 1906) has been one of the most mysterious moths of Mauritius, a small volcanic island located some 900 km east from Madagascar. Here, we reviewed its generic placement, phylogenetic relationships and the potential evolutionary scenarios leading to the current distribution of this unique Mauritian member of Syntomini. The species, known previously only from a few old museum specimens, is redescribed based on newly collected material including both sexes and eggs. The generic affiliation to the Palaearctic Dysauxes is confirmed based on morphological and molecular data. A hypothesis is presented on the colonization of Mauritius by the ancestor of D. florida from Madagascar through the now submerged... (More)

Maculonaclia florida (de Joannis, 1906) has been one of the most mysterious moths of Mauritius, a small volcanic island located some 900 km east from Madagascar. Here, we reviewed its generic placement, phylogenetic relationships and the potential evolutionary scenarios leading to the current distribution of this unique Mauritian member of Syntomini. The species, known previously only from a few old museum specimens, is redescribed based on newly collected material including both sexes and eggs. The generic affiliation to the Palaearctic Dysauxes is confirmed based on morphological and molecular data. A hypothesis is presented on the colonization of Mauritius by the ancestor of D. florida from Madagascar through the now submerged stepping stone islands of the Mascarene ridge. Behavioural data and environment preferences of D. florida are assessed for the first time. The species prefers shrubby vegetation with a humid understory, and presence of endemic shrub Ixora parviflora seems to play a role in selecting the suitable microhabitat. Additionally, based on IUCN criteria, a CR threat category is proposed, highlighting the major risk factors affecting the species. The significant variation in wing venation of D. florida is noted and provisionally correlated with environmental stress, which is the consequence of human-caused habitat degradation. Finally, the study provides further evidence for the significant role of Madagascar in the diversification of continental biota, indicating a Malagasy origin of the African syntomine Pseudonaclia puella.

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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Arctiinae, Dysauxes florida, endemics, Maculonaclia, Mascarene Islands, Mauritius, phylogeny, redescription, Syntomini
in
Zoologica Scripta
volume
50
issue
6
pages
752 - 768
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • scopus:85110990677
ISSN
0300-3256
DOI
10.1111/zsc.12508
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
4cce1a62-f311-4c48-85f7-bd14e6956464
date added to LUP
2021-08-23 15:40:54
date last changed
2024-05-04 11:04:04
@article{4cce1a62-f311-4c48-85f7-bd14e6956464,
  abstract     = {{<p>Maculonaclia florida (de Joannis, 1906) has been one of the most mysterious moths of Mauritius, a small volcanic island located some 900 km east from Madagascar. Here, we reviewed its generic placement, phylogenetic relationships and the potential evolutionary scenarios leading to the current distribution of this unique Mauritian member of Syntomini. The species, known previously only from a few old museum specimens, is redescribed based on newly collected material including both sexes and eggs. The generic affiliation to the Palaearctic Dysauxes is confirmed based on morphological and molecular data. A hypothesis is presented on the colonization of Mauritius by the ancestor of D. florida from Madagascar through the now submerged stepping stone islands of the Mascarene ridge. Behavioural data and environment preferences of D. florida are assessed for the first time. The species prefers shrubby vegetation with a humid understory, and presence of endemic shrub Ixora parviflora seems to play a role in selecting the suitable microhabitat. Additionally, based on IUCN criteria, a CR threat category is proposed, highlighting the major risk factors affecting the species. The significant variation in wing venation of D. florida is noted and provisionally correlated with environmental stress, which is the consequence of human-caused habitat degradation. Finally, the study provides further evidence for the significant role of Madagascar in the diversification of continental biota, indicating a Malagasy origin of the African syntomine Pseudonaclia puella.</p>}},
  author       = {{Przybyłowicz, Łukasz and Wiorek, Marcin and Przystałkowska, Anna and Wahlberg, Niklas}},
  issn         = {{0300-3256}},
  keywords     = {{Arctiinae; Dysauxes florida; endemics; Maculonaclia; Mascarene Islands; Mauritius; phylogeny; redescription; Syntomini}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{07}},
  number       = {{6}},
  pages        = {{752--768}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Zoologica Scripta}},
  title        = {{Alone on an island : The reassessment of an enigmatic species of Handmaiden Moth (Lepidoptera, Erebidae) endemic to Mauritius}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/zsc.12508}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/zsc.12508}},
  volume       = {{50}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}