Evolution and Diversification Dynamics of Butterflies

Akito Y. Kawahara(Florida Museum of Natural History), Caroline Storer(Florida Museum of Natural History), Ana Paula S. Carvalho(Florida Museum of Natural History), David Plotkin(Florida Museum of Natural History), Fabien L. Condamine(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Mariana P. Braga(Washington University in St. Louis), E. Ann Ellis(Florida Museum of Natural History), Ryan A. St Laurent(Florida Museum of Natural History), Xuankun Li(Florida Museum of Natural History), Vijay Barve(Florida Museum of Natural History), Liming Cai(University of California, Riverside), Chandra Earl(Florida Museum of Natural History), Paul B. Frandsen(Brigham Young University), Hannah L. Owens(University of Copenhagen), Wendy A. Valencia‐Montoya(Harvard University), Kwaku Aduse‐Poku(City College of New York), Emmanuel F. A. Toussaint(Florida Museum of Natural History), Kelly M. Dexter(Florida Museum of Natural History), Tenzing Doleck(The Graduate Center, CUNY), Amanda Markee(Florida Museum of Natural History), Rebeccah L. Messcher(Florida Museum of Natural History), Y‐Lan Nguyen(City College of New York), Jade Aster T. Badon(Silliman University), Hugo A. Benítez(Catholic University of the Maule), Michael F. Braby(Australian National University), Perry Archival C. Buenavente(National Museum of the Philippines), Wei-Ping Chan(Harvard University), Steve C. Collins, Richard Rabideau Childers(Harvard University), Even Dankowicz(Harvard University), Rod Eastwood(Harvard University), Zdeněk Faltýnek Fric(Czech Academy of Sciences, Biology Centre), Riley J. Gott(Florida Museum of Natural History), Jason P. W.‏ Hall(Smithsonian Institution), Winnie Hallwachs(University of Pennsylvania), Nate B. Hardy(Auburn University), Rachel L. Hawkins Sipe(Harvard University), Alan G. Heath(Harvard University), Jomar D. Hinolan(University of the Philippines Diliman), Nicholas T. Homziak(Florida Museum of Natural History), Yu‐Feng Hsu(National Taiwan Normal University), Yutaka Inayoshi, Micael Itliong(City College of New York), Daniel H. Janzen(University of Pennsylvania), Ian J. Kitching(Natural History Museum), Krushnamegh Kunte(Tata Institute of Fundamental Research), Gerardo Lamas(National University of San Marcos), Michael J. Landis(Washington University in St. Louis), Elise A. Larsen(Georgetown University), Torben Bjerregaard Larsen, Jing Vir Leong(City College of New York), Vladimir A. Lukhtanov(Zoological Institute), Crystal A. Maier(Harvard University), Jose I. Martinez(Florida Museum of Natural History), Dino J. Martins(Princeton University), Kiyoshi Maruyama, Sarah C. Maunsell(Harvard University), Nicolás Oliveira Mega(Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul), Alexander L. Monastyrskii(Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology), Ana Beatriz Barros de Morais(Universidade Federal de Santa Maria), Chris J. Müller(Australian Museum), Mark Arcebal K. Naive(Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden), Gregory J. Nielsen(Corporación Universitaria del Meta), Pablo Sebastián Padrón(Florida Museum of Natural History), Djunijanti Peggie(Indonesian Institute of Sciences), Helena Piccoli Romanowski(Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul), Szabolcs Sáfián(University of Sopron), Motoki Saito, Stefan Schröder, Vaughn Shirey(Georgetown University), Doug Soltis(Florida Museum of Natural History), Pamela S. Soltis(Florida Museum of Natural History), Andrei Sourakov(Florida Museum of Natural History), Gerard Talavera(Harvard University), Roger Vila(Institut de Biologia Evolutiva), Petr Vlašánek(T. G. Masaryk Water Research Institute), Houshuai Wang(South China Agricultural University), Andrew Warren(Florida Museum of Natural History), Keith R. Willmott(Florida Museum of Natural History), Masaya Yago(The University of Tokyo), Walter Jetz(Yale University), Marta A. Jarzyna(Yale University), Jesse W. Breinholt(Intermountain Healthcare), Marianne Espeland(Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig), Leslie Ries(Georgetown University), Robert Guralnick(Florida Museum of Natural History), Naomi E. Pierce(Harvard University), David J. Lohman(The Graduate Center, CUNY)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
May 19, 2022
Cited by 13Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Butterflies are a diverse and charismatic insect group that are thought to have diversified via coevolution with plants and in response to dispersals following key geological events. These hypotheses have been poorly tested at the macroevolutionary scale because a comprehensive phylogenetic framework and datasets on global distributions and larval hosts of butterflies are lacking. We sequenced 391 genes from nearly 2,000 butterfly species to construct a new, phylogenomic tree of butterflies representing 92% of all genera and aggregated global distribution records and larval host datasets. We found that butterflies likely originated in what is now the Americas, ∼100 Ma, shortly before the Cretaceous Thermal Maximum, then crossed Beringia and diversified in the Paleotropics. The ancestor of modern butterflies likely fed on Fabaceae, and most extant families were present before the K/Pg extinction. The majority of butterfly dispersals occurred from the tropics (especially the Neotropics) to temperate zones, largely supporting a “cradle” pattern of diversification. Surprisingly, host breadth changes and shifts to novel host plants had only modest impacts.


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